AU2007302184B2 - Galactosyltransferase - Google Patents
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- AU2007302184B2 AU2007302184B2 AU2007302184A AU2007302184A AU2007302184B2 AU 2007302184 B2 AU2007302184 B2 AU 2007302184B2 AU 2007302184 A AU2007302184 A AU 2007302184A AU 2007302184 A AU2007302184 A AU 2007302184A AU 2007302184 B2 AU2007302184 B2 AU 2007302184B2
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Abstract
The invention discloses DNA molecules encoding galactosyltransferases, recombinant host cells, tissues or organisms comprising dysfunctional galactosyltransferase gene(s), recombinant host cells, tissues or organisms comprising an introduced functional galactosyltransferase gene, methods for the production of proteins therewith, methods for the production of galactosyltransferase and vectors and uses thereof.
Description
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 Galactosyltransferase The present invention relates to polynucleotides coding for glycosyltransferases. Moreover, the present invention relates to partial polynucleotides thereof as well as to vectors comprising these polynucleotides in purposes of expression or gene disrup tion thereof, recombinant host cells,.tissue or organisms trans fected with the polynucleotides or parts thereof or DNA derived therefrom, as well as glycoproteins produced in these host cells, tissue or organisms. Furthermore, the present invention relates to the use of the expression product thereof in vitro as well as in vivo. In the past, heterologous proteins have been produced using a variety of transformed cell systems, such as those derived from bacteria, fungi, such as yeasts, insect, plant or mammalian cell lines. Proteins produced in prokaryotic organisms may not be post translationally modified in a similar manner to that of euka ryotic proteins produced in eukaryotic systems, e.g. they may not be glycosylated with appropriate sugars at particular amino acid residues, such as aspartic acid (N) residues (N-linked glycosylation). Furthermore, folding of bacterially-produced eu karyotic proteins may be inappropriate due to, for example, the inability of the bacterium to form cysteine disulfide bridges. Moreover, bacterially-produced recombinant proteins frequently aggregate and accumulate as insoluble inclusion bodies. Eukaryotic cell systems are better suited for the production of glycosylated proteins found in various eukaryotic organisms, such as humans, since such cell systems may effect post-transla tional modifications, such as N-glycosylation of produced pro teins. However, a problem encountered in eukaryotic cell systems which have been transformed with heterologous genes suitable for the production of protein sequences destined for use, for ex ample, as pharmaceuticals, is that the glycosylation pattern on such proteins often acquires a native pattern, that is, of the eukaryotic cell system in.which the protein has been produced: glycosylated proteins are produced that comprise non-animal WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 -2 glycosylation patterns and these in turn may be immunogenic and/or allergenic if applied in animals, including humans. In plants this limitation has been overcome by the elimination of the plant-specific sugar residues 1,2-xylose and al,3-fucose which in plants are generally linked to the core structure of N glycans (Lerouge et al. 1998 Plant Mol. Biol. 38, 31-48; Rayon et al. 1998 J. Experimental Bot. 49, 1463-1472). In case of Ara bidopsis thaliana (Strasser et al. 2004 FEBS Lett. 561, 132-136) and in case of the bryophyte Physcomitrella patens (EP1431394 ; Koprivova et al. 2004 Plant Biotechnol. J. 2, 517-523) mutants were generated showing N-glycan patterns completely lacking core xl,3-fucose and 1,2-xylose residues. Surprisingly, despite the modification of the pattern of the complex-type N-glycans no morphological alterations or changes in viability were observed in these mutants. Apart from the addition of the two plant-specific residues de scribed above the steps of glycoprotein maturation in the ER and in the cis-Golgi are identical in plants and mammals up to the action of GlcNAc-transferase I, GlcNAc-transferase II and Golgi a-mannosidase (Lerouge et al. 1998 Plant Mol. Biol. 38, 31-48). Further N-glycan elongation is carried out in a different manner in the two kingdoms. While in mammals the terminal GlcNAc residues are immediately shielded by the action of P1,4- (or, seldom, by 1,3-)- galactosyltransferase - with the notable ex ception of IgG where this step only occurs partially - elonga tion in plants is exclusively by Pl,3-galactosylation but only a very small part of the glycans appear to undergo this modifica tion as can be deduced from the relative abundance of various structural types. The galactose-residues in mammals may be capped by sialic acid and only quite rarely substituted by fucose. Again, plants are different, as they are devoid of sia lylation and in case that a terminal 1,3-linked galactose residue was attached they essentially always fucosylate the pen ultimate GlcNAc residue, thereby forming a Lewis a (LeA) determ inant. Apparently, the 01,3-galactosyltransferase is the limit ing enzyme whereas most plant cells contain sufficient activity of al,4-Fuc-transferase to make sure that each Gal containing antenna is fucosylated. The LeA structure is a human blood group determinant. It is rare as such in healthy adults but as sialyl- WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 -3 Lewis a (sLeA) it is notoriously found in malignant tissues such as colon cancer. Anyway, LeA containing glycoproteins are rarely isolated from plants and in case of Physcomitrella they present an amount of only up to five percent of totally solulable glyco-proteins irrespective if isolated from wild type plants or isolated from the glyco-engineered mutants lacking core fucose and xylose (Ko privova et al. 2003 Plant Biol. 5, 582-591; Koprivova et al. 2004 Plant Biotechnol. J. 2, 517-523). Whereas some investigations were performed regarding the al,4 fucosyltransferase which is involved in the generation of Lewis a type glycan structures in plants (Joly et al. 2002 J. Experi mental Bot. 53, 1429-1436; Bakker et al. 2001 FEBS Lett. 507, 307-312) there is no information available regarding a specific P1,3 galactosyltransferase which is involved in the elongation of N-glycan structures in plants. In eukaryotes 1,3-galactosyltransferases show a broad spectrum of acceptor specifities as well as distinct patterns of tissue expression (Hennet 2002 Cell. Mol. Life Sci. 59, 1081-1095; Amado et al. 1998 J. Biol. Chem. 21, 12770-12778). Among the different members of the pl,3-galactosyltransferase family of humans for sl,3-galactosyltransferase 2 it has been shown in vitro that this enzyme was active toward the transfer of galactose residues to GlcNAcpand egg ovalbumin -representing complex-type N-glycan structures as acceptor substrates (Amado et al. 1998 J. Biol. Chem. 21, 12770-12778). According to the existence of a family of homologous P1,3 galactosyltransferases in humans data base analysis revealed that in different plant species e.g. Arabidopsis thaliana and Oryza sativa similar large gene families of p1,3-galactosyl transferase genes exist. None of the members of these P1,3 galactosyltransferase genes is described as coding for an enzyme which comprise the ability to transfer galactose from UDP galactose to acceptor substrates with terminal non-reducing GlcNAc residues e.g. to non-reducing terminal residues of the complex-type N-glycans neither in vitro nor in vivo.
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 -4 It is an object of the present invention to identify and to clone and to sequence one or more genes - including non-coding corresponding genomic sequences - which code for plant 1,3galactosyltransferases, and to prepare vectors comprising the genes, DNA fragments thereof or an altered DNA or a DNA de rived thereof or DNA comprising deletions thereof. It is a fur ther objective to generate host cells, tissue or organisms com prising one or more of these vectors, to produce glycoproteins completely lacking Lewis a type N-glycan structures. It is a further objective to generate host cells, tissue or organisms comprising one or more of these vectors, to produce glycopro teins with improved Lewis a type N-glycan structures. It is a further objective to provide nucleotide sequences encoding mem brane domains for targeting enzymes to the late Golgi cisternae. Accordingly, the present invention provides i) a DNA molecule comprising a sequence according to SEQ ID NO: 1 having an open reading frame from base pair 513 to base pair 2417 or having at least 50% identity with the above-mentioned sequence or comprising a sequence which has degenerated to the above DNA sequence due to the genetic code, the sequence coding for a plant protein which has sl,3-galactosyltransferase activ ity or is complementary thereto, ii) a DNA molecule comprising a sequence according to SEQ ID NO: 2 having an open reading frame from base pair 1 to base pair 1902 or having at least 50% iden tity with the above-mentioned sequence or comprising a sequence which has degenerated to the above DNA sequence due to the ge netic code, the sequence coding for a plant protein which has 1,3-galactosyltransferase activity or is complementary thereto, iii) a DNA molecule comprising a sequence according to SEQ ID NO: 24 having an open reading frame from base pair 321 to base pair 2387 or having at least 50% identity with the above-men tioned sequence or comprising a sequence which has degenerated to the above DNA sequence due to the genetic code, the sequence coding for a plant protein which has pl,3-galactosyltransferase activity or is complementary thereto, iv) a DNA molecule com prising a sequence according to SEQ ID NO: 25 having an open reading frame from base pair 1 to base pair 2052 or having at least 50% identity with the above-mentioned sequence or compris- ~5 ing a sequence which has degenerated to the above DNA sequence due to the genetic code, the sequence coding for a plant protein which has p1, 3-galactosyltransferase activity or is complementary thereto, v) a DNA molecule comprising a sequence according to SEQ ID NO: 3 representing the genomic DNA structure from base pair 1 to base pair 6187 including intron sequences and exon sequences corresponding to SEQ ID NO: 1 allowing generation of knockout constructs with genomic sequences, vi) a DNA molecule comprising a sequence according to SEQ ID NO: 4 representing the genomic DNA structure from base pair 1 to base pair 4087 including intron sequences and exon sequences corresponding to SEQ ID NO: 2 allowing generation of knockout constructs with genomic sequences. The present invention further provides an isolated DNA molecule which comprises a sequence according to SEQ ID NO: 1 with an open reading frame from base pair 513 to base pair 2417 or a sequence according to SEQ ID NO: 24 with an open reading frame from base pair 321 to base pair 2387, or has at least 80% identity with at least one of the above whole sequences, or comprises a sequence which is degenerated to the above sequences due to the genetic code, with the sequences coding for plant proteins having $1,3 galactosyltransferase activity (p1,3-GalT activity) or being complementary thereto. Since the family of glycosyltransferases is highly divergent (Fig. 1) and only conserved regions (bold in Fig. 1) are highly similar, the present invention also provides a DNA molecule comprising a sequence having at least 20% overall identity to a sequence according to any one of SEQ ID NO: 1, SEQ ID NO: 2, SEQ ID NO: 24 or SEQ ID NO: 25 and having at least 80% identity to a sequence of the seven conserved domains of SEQ ID NO: 1 or SEQ ID NO: 2 encoding amino acids 387-392 (DLFIGI or ELFVGI), 402-409 (RMAVRKTW), 425-428 (FVAL), 455-465 (DRYDIVVLKTV), 479-489 (YIMkCDDDTFV or HVMKCDDDTFV), 536-548 (YPIYANGPGYILS or - 5a YPTYANGPGYILS) and 570-576 (EDVSVGI) of the protein of SEQ ID NO: 19 or SEQ ID NO: 20, or comprising a sequence which is degenerated to the above sequence due to the genetic code, with the sequence coding for plant proteins having Pl, 3-galactosyltransferase activity or being complementary thereto. Also provided is the DNA molecule comprising a sequence having at least 20% overall identity to a sequence according to any one of SEQ ID NO: 1, SEQ ID NO: 2, SEQ ID NO: 24 or SEQ ID NO: 25 and encoding at least 95%, preferably all, of the conserved amino acids of the seven conserved domains of SEQ ID NO: 1 or SEQ ID NO: 2 selected from amino acids 388 (L) , 402 (R) , 404 (A) , 406 (R) , 408 (T) , 409 (W), 425 (F), 455 (D), 457 (Y), 463 (K), 464 (T), 481 (M), 482 (K), 484 (D), 486 (D), 488 (F), 489 (V), 536 (Y), 537 (P), 542 (G), 544 (G) , 545 (Y) , 548 (S) , 570 (E), 571 (D) , 572 (V) , 575 (G) and 576 (I) of the protein of SEQ ID NO: 19 or SEQ ID NO: 20, or comprising a sequence which is degener WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 -6 ated to the above sequence due to the genetic code, with the se quence coding for plant proteins having pl,3-galactosyltrans ferase activity or being complementary thereto. Preferably the overall sequence identity is at least 25%, at least 30%, at least 35%, at least 40% or at least 45%. In further preferred embodiments the sequence identity for the conserved domains is at least 90%, at least 95% or 100%. The open reading frame of the sequence having SEQ ID NO: 1 codes for a protein with 634 amino acids (Fig. 2, SEQ ID NO: 19). The protein encoded by SEQ ID NO: 1 contains a transmembrane domain in the region between Leu20 and Leu39, and encloses the seven conserved domains -present in human p1,3-galactosyltransferases - described by Hennet (2002 Cell. Mol. Life Sci. 59, 1081-1095, Fig. 2) as well as most of the C-terminal located conserved amino acids as described by Amado et al. (1998 J. Biol. Chem. 21, 12770-12778, Fig. 2). The open reading frame of the sequence having SEQ ID NO: 2 codes for a protein with 633 amino acids (Fig. 3, SEQ ID NO: 20). The protein encoded by SEQ ID NO: 2 contains a transmembrane domain in the region between Leu20 and Leu39, and encloses the seven conserved domains -present in human pl,3-galactosyltransferases - described by Hennet (2002 Cell. Mol. Life Sci. 59, 1081-1095, Fig. 2) as well as most of the C-terminal located conserved amino acids as described by Amado et al. (1998 J. Biol. Chem. 21, 12770-12778, Fig. 2). The open reading frame of the sequence having SEQ ID NO: 24 codes for a protein with 688 amino acids (Fig. 4; SEQ ID NO: 26), which is an alternative splice variant to the protein of SEQ ID NO: 1. The open reading frame of the sequence having SEQ ID NO: 25 codes for a protein with 683 amino acids (Fig. 5, SEQ ID NO: 27), which is an alternative splice variant to the protein of SEQ ID NO: 2. The present invention also relates to the genomic sequences of this gene as given by SEQ ID NOs. 3 or 4, of course, as all oth- WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 -7 er DNA molecules or proteins according to the present invention (if not explicitly described otherwise) in isolated form. Activity of the plant 31,3-galactosyltransferases can be ana lysed by different approaches. According to Amado et al. (1998 J. Biol. Chem. 21, 12770-12778) constructs encoding the soluble secreted forms - lacking the transmembrane domain - of the pl,3-galactosyltransferases can be cloned into expression vectors e.g. appropriate for transfection of Baculo virus and amplified in Sf9 cells; the resulting ex pression products can be purified and subsequently assayed for @l,3-galactosyltransferase activity. Another approach due to the analyses of specific activity can be the overexpression of the pl,3-galactosyltransferases in an ap propriate host e.g. like Physcomitrella patens by preparing ex pression constructs designed to encode the full open reading frames of the pl,3-galactosyltransferases according to the present invention and by generation of Physcomitrella strains transgenic for at least one of the pl,3-galactosyltransferase genes according to the present invention. The generated trans genic strains show improved contents of galactosylated N glycans. N-glycan patterns from Physcomitrella can be isolated and analysed as described by Koprivova et al. (2003 Plant Biol. 5, 582-591) and Koprivova et al. (2004 Plant Biotechnol. J. 2, 517-523). pl,3-galactosyltransferase activities according to the present invention can be assayed indirectly by targeted disruption of the responsible genes in an appropriate host e.g. Physcomitrella patens which result in inhibition of @l1,3-galactosyltransferase activities in respect to the transfer of galactose from UDP galactose to the non-reducing terminal GlcNAc residues on N glycans and therefore to the lack of terminal galactosylation. Again, N-glycan patterns from Physcomitrella can be isolated and analysed as described by Koprivova et al. (2003 Plant Biol. 5, 582-591) and Koprivova et al. (2004 Plant Biotechnol. J. 2, 517-523). Preferably, the 1l,3-galactosyltransferase according to the present invention is a GlcNAc-p1,3-galactosyltransferase.
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 -8 Alternatively reduction of 1,3-galactosyltransferase activity can be achieved by methods which are commonly used for this kind of purpose e.g. the well known antisense strategy, sense strategy, ribozyme technology, PNA technology or RNA interfer ence strategy. According to the present invention a host cell, tissue or organ ism is transfected with the nucleotide sequences comprising at least the sequences of SEQ ID NO: 1, SEQ ID NO: 2, SEQ ID NO: 24 or SEQ ID NO: 25 which code for a functional f1,3-galactosyl transferase. In a preferred embodiment of this invention the coding sequences are linked to regulatory sequences such as pro moter and termination sequences allowing expression of the p1,3 galactosyltransferase genes resulting in the expression products which show pl,3-galactosyltransferase activities. Regarding the host cell tissue or organism the regulatory sequences operably linked to the Pl,3-galactosyltransferase coding sequence can be heterologous. In another embodiment the regulatory sequences op erably linked to the sl,3-galactosyltransferase coding sequence can be homologous due to the used host. The regulatory sequences operably linked to the Pl,3-galactosyltransferase coding se quence can be provided by the vector used for transfection or can be established in vivo by introducing the s,3-galactosyl transferase coding sequence by targeted integration e.g. homo logous recombination into an appropriate locus resulting in an operably functional assembly of the $1,3-galactosyltransferase coding sequence with the endogenous regulatory sequences of the host cell, tissue or organism. In a preferred embodiment of the present invention the expres sion product or parts thereof e.g. a soluble form lacking trans membrane domains comprising pl,3-galactosyltransferase can be used for elongation of N-glycans on glycolipids or glycoproteins in vitro or in vivo. In a further embodiment the resulting N glycans comprising terminal 1,3 linked galactose residues can be further elongated in vitro or in vivo with additional sugar residues like fucose, galactose or sialic acid residues. Accord ingly, the present invention relates to novel glycoproteins with N-glycans sugar structure comprising complex type N-glycans con- WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 -9 taining terminal sugar residues, such as galactose, an addition al fucose, sialic acid or combinations thereof. In a more pre ferred embodiment, these glycoproteins are surface proteins presenting the complex type N-gylcans to the outer environment of the cell, e.g. allowing protein/protein contacts (such as contacts with antibodies, other cells, etc.) or secretory pro teins, e.g. antibodies or erythropoietin. Such glycoproteins produced according to the present invention are highly suitable for vaccination, especially of humans, both in vitro and in vivo. In another embodiment of the present invention there are provided nucleotide sequences according to SEQ ID NO: 1, SEQ ID NO: 2, SEQ ID NO: 24 or SEQ ID NO: 25 which encode transmembrane domains for targeting a heterologous protein to the late Golgi cisternae. In a preferred embodiment 1,4-galactosyltransferases or sialyltransferases showing activity for elongation of N glycans are targeted to the late Golgi cisternae by exchange of the native transmembrane domains with these of the p1,3-galacto syltransferases according to the present invention. According to the present invention there is provided a trans formed host cell that comprises at least one dysfunctional P1,3 galactosyltransferase nucleotide sequence. In a preferred embodiment of the invention the host cell is se lected from plants, e.g. Lemna species, Wolffia species, rice, carrot, corn, maize and tobacco species. In a more preferred em bodiment of the present invention the host cell is selected from bryophytes including mosses and liverworts, of species from the genera Physcomitrella, Funaria, Sphagnum, Ceratodon, Marchantia and Sphaerocarpos. The bryophyte cell is preferably from Phy scomitrella patens. A preferred host according to the present invention is a bry ophyte, especially Physcomitrella patens, a haploid non-vascular land plant, can be used for the production of glyco-engineered recombinant proteins (WO 01/25456). In Physcomitrella patens as well as in other plants Lewis a type structures have been detec ted (Koprivova et al. 2003 Plant Biol. 5, 582-591; Koprivova et WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 10 al. 2004 Plant Biotechnol. J. 2, 517-523). Although from plants no @l,3-galactosyltransferases showing specific activity in elongation of N-glycan structures have been identified Phy scomitrella was choosen as a putative source for this unknown kind of glycosyltransferase. The life cycle of mosses is dominated by photoautotrophic gamet ophytic generation. The life cycle is completely different to that of the higher plants wherein the sporophyte is the dominant generation and there are notably many differences to be observed between higher plants and bryophytes. The gametophyte of bryophytes including mosses is characterised by two distinct developmental stages. The protonema which devel ops via apical growth, grows into a filamentous network of only two cell types (chloronemal and caulonemal cells). The second stage, called the gametophore, differentiates by caulinary growth from a simple apical system. Both stages are photoauto trophically active. Cultivation of protonema without differenti ation into the more complex gametophore has been shown for sus pension cultures in flasks as well as for bioreactor cultures (WO 01/25456). Cultivation of fully differentiated and pho toautrophically active multicellullar tissue containing only a few cell types is not described for higher plants. The genetic stability of the moss cell system provides an important advant age over plant cell cultures. There are some important differences between bryophytes (non vascular plants) and higher plants (vascular plants) on the bio chemical level. Sulfate assimilation in Physcomitrella patens differs significantly from that in higher plants. The key enzyme of sulfate assimilation in higher plants is adenosine 5'-phos phosulfate reductase. In Physcomitrella patens an alternative pathway via phosphoadenosine 5'-phosphosulfate reductase co-ex ists (Koprivova et al. (2002) J. Biol. Chem. 277,32195-32201). This pathway has not been characterised in higher plants. Furthermore, many members of the bryophytes, algae and fern fam ilies produce a wide range of polyunsaturated fatty acids (Dem bitsky (1993) Prog. Lipid Res. 32, 281-356). For example, WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 11 arachidonic acid and eicosapentaenoic acid are thought to be produced only by lower plants and not by higher plants. Some en zymes of the metabolism of polyunsaturated fatty acids, (delta 6-acyl-group desaturase) (Girke et al. (1998), Plant J, 15, 39-48) and a component of a delta 6 elongase (Zank et al. (2002) Plant J 31, 255-268), have been cloned from Physcomitrella patens. No corresponding genes have been found in higher plants. This fact appears to confirm that essential differences exist between higher plants and lower plants at the biochemical level. Moreover, bryophytes show highly efficient homologous recombina tion in its nuclear DNA, a unique feature for plants, which en ables directed gene disruption (Girke et al. (1998) Plant J, 15, 39-48; Strepp et al. (1998) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 95,4368-4373; Koprivova (2002) J. Biol. Chem.277, 32195-32201; reviewed by Reski (1999) Planta 208, 301-309; Schaefer and Zryd (2001) Plant Phgs 127, 1430-1438; Schaefer (2002) Annu. Rev. Plant Biol.53, 477-501; Koprivova et al. 2004 Plant Biotechnol. J. 2, 517-523; Brucker et al. 2005 Planta 220, 864-874) further illustrating fundamental differences to higher plants. However, in some cases the use of this mechanism for altering glycosylation pattern has proven to be problematic, as shown herein in the examples. Dis ruption of N-acetylglucosaminyltransferase I (GNT1) in Phy scomitrella patens resulted in the loss of the specific tran script but only in minor differences of the N-glycosylation pat tern. These results were in direct contrast to the loss of Golgi-modified complex glycans in a mutant Arabidopsis thaliana plant lacking GNT1 observed by von Schaewen et al. (1993) Plant Physiol 102, 1109-1118). Thus, the knockout in Physcomitrella patens did not result in the expected modification of the N glycosylation pattern. Although the knockout strategy was not successful for the glyc osyltransferase GNT1, regarding the disruptions of the genes coding for the pl,2-xylosyltransferase and al,3-galactosyltrans ferase knockouts were performed successfully in Physcomitrella patens. In addition integration of the human P1,4-galactosyltransferase into the genome of a double knockout Physcomitrella patens plant WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 12 resulted in a mammalian-like N-linked glycosylation pattern without the plant specific fucosyl and xylosyl residues and with mammalian-like terminal 1,4 galactosyl residues. The galactosyl transferase was found to be active. The bryophyte cell, such as a Physcomitrella patens cell, can be any cell suitable for transformation according to methods of the invention as described herein, and may be a moss protoplast cell, a cell found in protonema tissue or other cell type. In deed, the skilled addressee will appreciate that moss plant tis sue comprising populations of transformed bryophyte cells ac cording to the invention, such as transformed protonemal tissue also forms an aspect of the present invention. "Dysfunctional" as used herein means that the nominated trans ferase nucleotide sequences of 1l,3-galactosyltransferase (p1,3 GalT) are substantially incapable of encoding mRNA that codes for functional p1,3-GalT proteins that are capable of modifying plant N-linked glycans with 1,3 linked terminal galactose residues. In a preferment, the dysfunctional p1,3-GalT plant transferase nucleotide sequences comprise targeted insertions of exogenous nucleotide sequences into endogenous, that is genomic, native @1,3-GalT genes comprised in the nuclear bryophyte genome (whether it is a truly native bryophyte genome, that is in bry ophyte cells that have not been transformed previously by man with other nucleic acid sequences, or in a transformed nuclear bryophyte genome in which nucleic acid sequence insertions have been made previously of desired nucleic acid sequences) which substantially inhibits or represses the transcription of mRNA coding for functional p1,3-GalT activity. A further aspect of the invention relates to a biologically functional vector which comprises one of the above-indicated DNA molecules or parts thereof of differing lengths with at least 20 base pairs. For transfection into host cells, an independent vector capable of amplification is necessary, wherein, depending on the host cell, transfection mechanism, task and size of the DNA molecule, a suitable vector can be used. Since a large num ber of different vectors is known, an enumeration thereof would go beyond the limits of the present application and therefore is WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 13 done without here, particularly since the vectors are very well known to the skilled artisan (as regards the vectors as well as all the techniques and terms used in this specification which are known to the skilled artisan, cf. also Sambrook Maniatis). Ideally, the vector has a small molecule mass and should com prise selectable genes so as to lead to an easily recognizable phenotype in a cell so thus enable an easy selection of vector containing and vector-free host cells. To obtain a high yield of DNA and corresponding gene products, the vector should comprise a strong promoter, as well as an enhancer, gene amplification signals and regulator sequences. For an autonomous replication of the vector, furthermore, a replication origin is important. Polyadenylation sites are responsible for correct processing of the mRNA and splice signals for the RNA transcripts. If phages, viruses or virus particles are used as the vectors, packaging signals will control the packaging of the vector DNA. For in stance, for transcription in plants, Ti plasmids are suitable, and for transcription in insect cells, baculoviruses, and in in sects, respectively, transposons, such as the P element. If the above-described inventive vector is inserted into a plant or into a plant cell, a post-transcriptional suppression of the gene expression of the endogenous Bl,3galactosyltrans ferase gene is attained by transcription of a transgene homolog ous thereto or of parts thereof, in sense orientation. For this sense technique, furthermore, reference is made to the publica tions by Baucombe 1996, Plant. Mol. Biol., 9:373-382, and Brigneti et al., 1998, EMBO J. 17:6739-6746. This strategy of "gene silencing" is an effective way of suppressing the expres sion of the pl,3galactosyltransferase gene, cf. also Waterhouse et al., 1998, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA, 95:13959-13964. Furthermore, the invention relates to a biologically functional vector comprising a DNA molecule according to one of the above described embodiments, or parts thereof of differing lengths in reverse orientation to the promoter. If this vector is transfec ted in- a host cell, an "antisense mRNA" will be read which is complementary to the mRNA of the P1,3galactosyltransferase and complexes the latter. This bond will either hinder correct pro cessing, transportation, stability or, by preventing ribosome WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 14 annealing, it will hinder translation and thus the normal gene expression of the 31,3galactosyltransferase. Although the entire sequence of the DNA molecule could be inser ted into the vector, partial sequences thereof because of their smaller size may be advantageous for certain purposes. With the antisense aspect, e.g., it is important that the DNA molecule is large enough to form a sufficiently large antisense mRNA which will bind to the transferase mRNA. A suitable antisense RNA mo lecule comprises, e.g., from 50 to 200 nucleotides since many of the known, naturally occurring antisense RNA molecules comprise approximately 100 nucleotides. For a particularly effective inhibition of the expression of an active 1,3galactosyltransferase, a combination of the sense technique and the antisense technique is suitable (Waterhouse et al., 1998, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci., USA, 95:13959-13964). Advantageously, rapidly hybridizing RNA molecules are used. The efficiency of antisense RNA molecules which have a size of more than 50 nucleotides will depend on the annealing kinetics in vitro. Thus, e.g., rapidly annealing antisense RNA molecules exhibit a greater inhibition of protein expression than slowly hybridizing RNA molecules (Wagner et al., 1994, Annu. Rev. Mi crobiol., 48:713-742; Rittner et al., 1993, Nucl. Acids Res., 21:1381-1387). Such rapidly hybridizing antisense RNA molecules particularly comprise a large number of external bases (free ends and connecting sequences), a large number of structural subdomains (components) as well as a low degree of loops (Patzel et al. 1998; Nature Biotechnology, 16; 64-68). The hypothetical secondary structures of the antisense RNA molecule may, e.g., be determined by aid of a computer program, according to which a suitable antisense RNA DNA sequence is chosen. Different sequence regions of the DNA molecule may be inserted into the vector. One possibility consists, e.g., in inserting into the vector only that part which is responsible for ribosome annealing. Blocking in this region of the mRNA will suffice to stop the entire translation. A particularly high efficiency of the antisense molecules also results for the 5'- and 3'-non- WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 15 translated regions of the gene. Preferably, the DNA molecule according to the invention includes a sequence which comprises a deletion, insertion and/or substi tution mutation. The number of mutant nucleotides is variable and varies from a single one to several deleted, inserted or substituted nucleotides. It is also possible that the reading frame is shifted by the mutation. In such a "knock-out gene" it is merely important that the expression of a sl,3galactosyl transferase is disturbed, and the formation of an active, func tional enzyme is prevented. In doing so, the site of the muta tion is variable, as long as expression of an enzymatically act ive protein is prevented. Preferably, the mutation in the cata lytic region of the enzyme which is located in the C-terminal region. The method of inserting mutations in DNA sequences are well known to the skilled artisan, and therefore the various possibilities of mutageneses need not be discussed here in de tail. Coincidental mutageneses as well as, in particular, direc ted mutageneses, e.g. the site-directed mutagenesis, oligonuc leotide-controlled mutagenesis or mutageneses by aid of restric tion enzymes may be employed in this instance. Alternatively, ribozyme or siRNA techniques may be applied for reducing or eliminating sl,3-GaltT activity in cells which have wildtype pl,3-GalT activity. Adaptation of siRNA techniques to the present invention are straight forward based on existing skills in the art (e.g. Nat.Reviews: RNA interference collection (October 2005)). The invention further provides a DNA molecule which codes for a ribozyme which comprises two sequence portions of at least 10 to 15 base pairs each, which are complementary to sequence portions of an inventive DNA molecule as described above so that the ri bozyme complexes and cleaves the mRNA which is transcribed from a natural sl,3galactosyltransferase DNA molecule. The ribozyme will recognized the mRNA of the P1,3galactosyltransferase by complementary base pairing with the mRNA. Subsequently, the ri bozyme will cleave and destroy the RNA in a sequence-specific manner, before the enzyme is translated. After dissociation from the cleaved substrate, the ribozyme will repeatedly hybridize WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 16 with RNA molecules and act as specific endonuclease. In general, ribozymes may specifically be produced for inactivation of a certain mRNA, even if not the entire DNA sequence which codes for the protein is known. Ribozymes are particularly efficient if the ribosomes move slowly along the mRNA. In that case it is easier for the ribozyme to find a ribosome-free site on the mRNA. For this reason, slow ribosome mutants are also suitable as a system for ribozymes (J. Burke, 1997, Nature Biotechnology; 15, 414-415). This DNA molecule is particularly advantageous for the downregulation and inhibition, respectively, of the expres sion of plant 1,3galactosyltransferases. One possible way is also to use a varied form of a ribozmye, i.e. a minizyme. Minizymes are efficient particularly for cleav ing larger mRNA molecules. A minizyme is a hammer head ribozyme which has a short oligonucleotide linker instead of the stem/loop II. Dimer-minizymes are particularly efficient (Kuwabara et al., 1998, Nature Biotechnology, 16; 961-965). Consequently, the invention also relates to a biologically func tional vector which comprises one of the two last-mentioned DNA molecules (mutation or ribozyme-DNA molecule). What has been said above regarding vectors also applies in this instance. Such a vector can be, for example, inserted into a microorganism and can be used for the production of high concentrations of the above described DNA molecules. Furthermore such a vector is par ticularly good for the insertion of a specific DNA molecule into a plant organism in order to downregulate or completely inhibit the $1,3galactosyltransferase production in this organism. All vectors described above can also be made with genomic sequences of P1,3-GalT genes, such as SEQ ID NOs. 3 or 4. Bryophyte cells of the invention or ancestors thereof may be any which have been transformed previously with heterologous genes of interest that code for primary sequences of proteins of in terest which are glycosylated with mammalian glycosylation pat terns as described herein. Preferably, the glycosylation pat terns are of the human type. Alternatively, the bryophyte cell may be transformed severally, that is, simultaneously or over time with nucleotide sequences coding for at least a primary WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 17 protein sequence of interest, typically at least a pharmaceutic al protein of interest for use in humans or mammals such as livestock species including bovine, ovine, equine and porcine species, that require mammalian glycosylation patterns to be placed on them in accordance with the methods of the invention as described herein. Such pharmaceutical glycoproteins for use in mammals, including man include but are not limited to pro teins such as VEGF, interferons such as a-interferon, -inter feron, gamma-interferon, blood-clotting factors selected from Factor VII, VIII, IX, X, XI, and XII, fertility hormones includ ing luteinising hormone, follicle stimulating hormone growth factors including epidermal growth factor, platelet-derived growth factor, granulocyte colony stimulating factor and the like, prolactin, oxytocin, thyroid stimulating hormone, adreno corticotropic hormone, calcitonin, parathyroid hormone, soma tostatin, erythropoietin (EPO), enzymes such as p-gluco cerebrosidase, haemoglobin, collagen, fusion proteins such as the fusion protein of TNF areceptor ligand binding domain with Fc portion of IgG and the like. Furthermore, the method of the invention can be used for the production of immunglobulins such as antibodies such as specific monoclonal antibodies or active fragments thereof. Detailed information on the culturing of mosses which are suit able for use in the invention, such as Leptobryum pyriforme and Sphagnum magellanicum in bioreactors, is known in the prior art (see, for example, E. Wilbert, "Biotechnological studies con cerning the mass culture of mosses with particular consideration of the arachidonic acid metabolism", Ph.D. thesis, University of Mainz (1991); H. Rudolph and S. Rasmussen, Studies on secondary metabolism of Sphagnum cultivated in bioreactors, Crypt. Bot., 3, pp. 67-73 (1992)). Especially preferred for the purposes of the present invention is the use of Physcomitrella patens, since molecular biology techniques are practised on this organism (for a review see R. Reski, Development, genetics and molecular bio logy of mosses, Bot. Acta, 111, pp. 1-15 (1998)). Suitable transformation systems have been developed for the bio technological exploitation of Physcomitrella for the production of heterologous proteins. For example, successful transforma- WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 18 tions have been carried out by direct DNA transfer into pro tonema tissue using particle guns. PEG-mediated DNA transfer in to moss protoplasts has also been successfully achieved. The PEG-mediated transformation method has been described many times for Physcomitrella patens and leads both to transient and to stable transformants (see, for example, K. Reutter and R. Reski, Production of a heterologous protein in bioreactor cultures of fully differentiated moss plants, Pl. Tissue culture and Bi otech., 2, pp. 142-147 (1996)). In a further embodiment of the present invention there is provided a method of producing at least a bryophyte cell wherein s-1,3-GalT activity is substantially reduced that comprises in troducing into the said cell i) a first nucleic acid sequence that is specifically targeted to the endogenous S1,3 encoding nucleotide sequence according to SEQ ID NO: 1 and ii) a second nucleic acid sequence that is specifically targeted to the endo genous Pl,3 encoding nucleotide sequence according to SEQ ID NO: 2. The skilled addressee will appreciate that the order of intro duction of said first and second transferase nucleic acid se quences into the bryophyte cell is not important: it can be per formed in any order. The first and second nucleic acid sequences can be targeted to specific portions of the endogenous, native p1,3-GalT genes located in the nuclear genome of the bryophyte cell defined by specific restriction enzyme sites thereof, for example, according to the examples as provided herein. By spe cifically targeting the sequences of the native p1,3-GalT genes with nucleotide sequences that specifically integrate with the target native transferase genes of interest, the expression of the said sequences is substantially impaired if not completely disrupted. Preferably all glycosylated mammalian proteins mentioned herein above are of the human type. Other proteins that are contem plated for production in the present invention include proteins for use in veterinary care and may correspond to animal homo logues of the human proteins mentioned herein.
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 19 An exogenous promoter is one that denotes a promoter that is in troduced in front of a nucleic acid sequence of interest and is operably associated therewith. Thus an exogenous promoter is one that has been placed in front of a selected nucleic acid compon ent as herein defined and does not consist of the natural or native promoter usually associated with the nucleic acid compon ent of interest as found in wild type circumstances. Thus a pro moter may be native to a bryophyte cell of interest but may not be operably associated with the nucleic acid of interest in front in wild-type bryophyte cells. Typically, an exogenous pro moter is one that is transferred to a host bryophyte cell from a source other than the host cell. Regarding the production of N-glycan structures with improved pl,3-galactosylation the cDNA's encoding the P-1,3-GalT pro teins, the glycosylated and the mammalian proteins as described herein contain at least one type of promoter that is operable in a bryophyte cell, for example, an inducible or a constitutive promoter operatively linked to a p-1,3-GalT nucleic acid se quence and/or second nucleic acid sequence for a glycosylated mammalian protein as herein defined and as provided by the present invention. As discussed, this enables control of expres sion of the gene(s). The term "inducible" as applied to a promoter is well understood by those skilled in the art. In essence, expression under the control of an inducible promoter is "switched on" or increased in response to an applied stimulus (which may be generated with in a cell or provided exogenously). The nature of the stimulus varies between promoters. Some inducible promoters cause little or undetectable levels of expression (or no expression) in the absence of the appropriate stimulus. Other inducible promoters cause detectable constitutive expression in the absence of the stimulus. Whatever the level of expression is in the absence of the stimulus, expression from any inducible promoter is in creased in the presence of the correct stimulus. The preferable situation is where the level of expression increases upon appli cation of the relevant stimulus by an amount effective to alter a phenotypic characteristic. Thus an inducible (or "switchable") promoter may be used which causes a basic level of expression in WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 20 the absence of the stimulus which level is too low to bring about a desired phenotype (and may in fact be zero). Upon appli cation of the stimulus, expression is increased (or switched on) to a level, which brings about the desired phenotype. As alluded to herein, bryophyte expression systems are also known to the man skilled in the art. A bryophyte promoter, in particular a Physcomitrella patens promoter, is any DNA sequence capable of binding a host DNA-dependent RNA polymerase and ini tiating the downstream (3') transcription of a coding sequence (e.g. structural gene) into mRNA. A promoter will have a tran scription initiation region which is usually placed proximal to the 5' end of the coding sequence. This transcription initiation region usually includes an RNA polymerase binding site (the "TATA Box") and a transcription initiation site. A bryophyte promoter may also have a second domain called an upstream activ ator sequence (UAS), which, if present, is usually distal to the structural gene. The UAS permits regulated (inducible) expres sion. Constitutive expression occurs in the absence of a UAS. Regulated expression may be either positive or negative, thereby either enhancing or reducing transcription. The skilled addressee will appreciate that bryophyte promoter sequences encoding enzymes in bryophyte metabolic pathways can provide particularly useful promoter sequences. In addition, synthetic promoters which do not occur in nature may also function as bryophyte promoters. For example, UAS se quences of one byrophyte promoter may be joined with the tran scription activation region of another bryophyte promoter, cre ating a synthetic hybrid promoter. An example of a suitable pro moter is the one used in the TOP 10 expression system for Physcomitrella patens by Zeidler et al. (1996) Plant. Mol. Biol. 30, 199-205). Furthermore, a bryophyte promoter can include nat urally occurring promoters of non-bryophyte origin that have the ability to bind a bryophyte DNA-dependent RNA polymerase and initiate transcription. Examples of such promoters include those described, inter alia, the rice P-Actin 1 promoter and the Chlamydomonas RbcS promoter (Zeidler et al. (1999) J. Plant Physiol. 154, 641-650), Cohen et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 21 USA, 77: 1078, 1980; Henikoff et al., Nature, 283: 835, 1981; Hollenberg et al., Curr. Topics Microbiol. Immunol., 96: 119, 198 1; Hollenberg et al., "The Expression of Bacterial Antibiot ic Resistance Genes in the Yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae", in: Plasmids of Medical, Environmental and Commercial Importance (eds. K. N. Timms and A. Puhler), 1979; Mercerau-Puigalon et al., Gene, 1 1: 163, 1980; Panthier et al., Curr. Genet., 2: 109, 1980. The DNA molecules according to the present invention may be ex pressed intracellularly in bryophytes. A promoter sequence may be directly linked with the DNA molecule, in which case the first amino acid at the N-terminus of the recombinant protein will always be a methionine, which is encoded by the AUG start codon on the mRNA. If desired, methionine at the N-terminus may be cleaved from the protein by in vitro incubation with cyanogen bromide. Alternatively, foreign proteins can also be secreted from the bryophyte cell into the growth media by creating chimeric DNA molecules that encode a fusion protein comprised of a leader se quence fragment that provides for secretion in or out of bry ophyte cells of the foreign protein. Preferably, there are pro cessing sites encoded between the leader fragment and the for eign gene that can be cleaved either in vivo or in vitro. The leader sequence fragment usually encodes a signal peptide com prised of hydrophobic amino acids which direct the secretion of the protein from the cell. DNA encoding suitable signal sequences can be derived from genes for secreted bryophyte proteins, such as leaders of non-bry ophyte origin, such as a VEGF leader, exist that may also provide for secretion in bryophyte cells. Transcription termination sequences that are recognized by and functional in bryophyte cells are regulatory regions located 3' to the translation stop codon, and thus together with the pro moter flank the coding sequence. These sequences direct the transcription of an mRNA which can be translated into the poly peptide encoded by the DNA. An example of a suitable termination WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 22 sequence that works in Physcomitrella patens is the termination region of Cauliflower mosaic virus. Typically, the components, comprising a promoter, leader (if de sired), coding sequence of interest, and transcription termina tion sequence, are put together into expression constructs of the invention. Expression constructs are often maintained in a DNA plasmid, which is an extrachromosomal element capable of stable maintenance in a host, such as a bacterium. The DNA plas mid may have two origins of replication, thus allowing it to be maintained, for example, in a bryophyte for expression and in a prokaryotic host for cloning and amplification. Generally speak ing it is sufficient if the plasmid has one origin of replica tion for cloning and amplification in a prokaryotic host cell. In addition, a DNA plasmid may be either a high or low copy num ber plasmid. A high copy number plasmid will generally have a copy number ranging from about 5 to about 200, and usually about 10 to about 150. A host containing a high copy number plasmid will preferably have at least about 10, and more preferably at least about 20. Either a high or low copy number vector may be selected, depending upon the effect of the vector and the for eign protein on the host (see, e.g., Brake et al., supra). Alternatively, the expression constructs can be integrated into the bryophyte genome with an integrating vector. Integrating vectors usually contain at least one sequence homologous to a bryophyte chromosome that allows the vector to integrate, and preferably contain two homologous sequences flanking the expres sion construct. An integrating vector may be directed to a spe cific locus in moss by selecting the appropriate homologous se quence for inclusion in the vector as described and exemplified herein. One or more expression constructs may integrate. The chromosomal sequences included in the vector can occur either as a single segment in the vector, which results in the integration of the entire vector, or two segments homologous to adjacent segments in the chromosome and flanking the expression construct in the vector, which can result in the stable integration of only the expression construct. Usually, extrachromosomal and integrating expression constructs WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 23 may contain selectable markers to allow for the selection of bryophyte cells that have been transformed. Selectable markers may include biosynthetic genes that can be expressed in the moss host, such as the G418 or hygromycin B resistance genes, which confer resistance in bryophyte cells to G418 and hygromycin B, respectively. In addition, a suitable se lectable marker may also provide bryophyte cells with the abil ity to grow in the presence of toxic compounds, such as metal. Alternatively, some of the above-described components can be put together into transformation vectors. Transformation vectors are usually comprised of a selectable marker that is either main tained in a DNA plasmid or developed into an integrating vector, as described above. Alternatively, by achieving high yields of transformation events as observed in Physcomitrella the use of markers for the selec tion of transformation events can be avoided. Methods of introducing exogenous DNA into bryophyte cells are well-known in the art, and are described inter alia by Schaefer D. G. "Principles and protocols for the moss Physcomitrella patens", (May 2001) Institute of Ecology, Laboratory of Plant Cell Genetics, University of Lausanne; Reutter K. and Reski R., Plant Tissue Culture and Biotechnology September 1996, Vol.2, No.3; Zeidler M et al., (1996), Plant Molecular Biology 30:199-205. Those skilled in the art are well able to construct vectors and design protocols for recombinant nucleic acid sequence or gene expression as described above. Suitable vectors can be chosen or constructed, containing appropriate regulatory sequences, in cluding promoter sequences, terminator fragments, polyadenyla tion sequences, enhancer sequences, marker genes and other se quences as appropriate. For further details see, for example, Molecular Cloning: a Laboratory Manual: 2nd edition, Sambrook et al, 1989, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. Many known tech niques and protocols for manipulation of nucleic acid, for exam ple in preparation of nucleic acid constructs, mutagenesis, se- WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 24 quencing, introduction of DNA into cells and gene expression, and analysis of proteins, are described in detail in Current Protocols in Molecular Biology, Second Edition, Ausubel et al. eds., John Wiley & Sons, 1992. The disclosures of Sambrook et al. and Ausubel et al. are incorporated herein by reference. As described above, selectable genetic markers may facilitate the selection of transgenic bryophyte cells and these may con sist of chimaeric genes that confer selectable phenotypes as al luded to herein. When introducing selected glycosyltransferase encoding nucleic acid sequences and polypetide sequences comprising glycosyl transferase activity into a bryophyte cell, certain considera tions must be taken into account, well known to those skilled in the art. The nucleic acid(s) to be inserted should be assembled within a construct, which contains effective regulatory ele ments, which will drive transcription. There must be available a method of transporting the construct into the cell. Once the construct is within the cell membrane, integration into the en dogenous chromosomal material either will or will not occur. The invention further encompasses a host cell transformed with vectors or constructs as set forth above, especially a bryophyte or a microbial cell. Thus, a host cell, such as a bryophyte cell, including nucleotide sequences of the invention as herein indicated is provided. Within the cell, the nucleotide sequence may be incorporated within the chromosome. Also according to the invention there is provided a bryophyte cell having incorporated into its genome at least a nucleotide sequence, particularly heterologous nucleotide sequences, as provided by the present invention under operative control of regulatory sequences for control of expression as herein de scribed. The coding sequence may be operably linked to one or more regulatory sequences which may be heterologous or foreign to the nucleic acid sequences employed in the invention, such as not naturally associated with the nucleic acid sequence(s) for its(their) expression. The nucleotide sequence according to the invention may be placed under the control of an externally indu- WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 25 cible promoter to place expression under the control of the user. A further aspect of the present invention provides a meth od of making such a bryophyte cell, particularly a Phy scomitrella patens cell involving introduction of nucleic acid sequence(s) contemplated for use in the invention or at least a suitable vector including the sequence(s) contemplated for use in the invention into a bryophyte cell and causing or allowing recombination between the vector and the bryophyte cell genome to introduce the said sequences into the genome. The invention extends to bryophyte cells, particularly Physcomitrella patens cells containing a GalT nucleotide and/or a nucleotide sequence coding for a polypeptide sequence destined for the addition of a mammalian glycosylation pattern thereto and suitable for use in the invention as a result of introduction of the nucleotide se quence into an ancestor cell. The term "heterologous" may be used to indicate that the gene/sequence of nucleotides in question have been introduced into bryophyte cells or an ancestor thereof, using genetic en gineering, ie by human intervention. A transgenic bryophyte cell, i.e. transgenic for the nucleotide sequence in question, may be provided. The transgene may be on an extra-genomic vector or incorporated, preferably stably, into the genome. A hetero logous gene may replace an endogenous equivalent gene, ie one that normally performs the same or a similar function, or the inserted sequence may be additional to the endogenous gene or other sequence. An advantage of introduction of a heterologous gene is the ability to place expression of a sequence under the control of a promoter of choice, in order to be able to influ ence expression according to preference. Nucleotide sequences heterologous, or exogenous or foreign, to a bryophyte cell may be non-naturally occurring in cells of that type, strain or spe cies. Thus, a nucleotide sequence may include a coding sequence of or derived from a particular type of bryophyte cell, such as a Physcomitella patens cell, placed within the context of a bry ophyte cell of a different type or species. A further possibil ity is for a nucleotide sequence to be placed within a bryophyte cell in which it or a homologue is found naturally, but wherein the nucleotide sequence is linked and/or adjacent to nucleic acid which does not occur naturally within the cell, or cells of WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 26 that type or species or strain, such as operably linked to one or more regulatory sequences, such as a promoter sequence, for control of expression. A sequence within a bryophyte or other host cell may be identifiably heterologous, exogenous or for eign. The present invention also encompasses the desired polypeptide expression product of the combination of nucleic acid molecules according to the invention as disclosed herein or obtainable in accordance with the information and suggestions herein. Also provided are methods of making such an expression product by ex pression from nucleotide sequences encoding therefore under suitable conditions in suitable host cells e.g. E.coli. Those skilled in the art are well able to construct vectors and design protocols and systems for expression and recovery of products of recombinant gene expression. A polypeptide according to the present invention may be an al lele, variant, fragment, derivative, mutant or homologue of the(a) polypeptides as mentioned herein. The allele, variant, fragment, derivative, mutant or homologue may have substantially the same function of the polypeptides alluded to above and as shown herein or may be a functional mutant thereof. In the con text of pharmaceutical proteins as described herein for use in humans, the skilled addressee will appreciate that the primary sequence of such proteins and their glycosylation pattern will mimick or preferably be identical to that found in humans. "Identity" in relation to a nucleic acid sequence or to an amino acid sequence of the invention may be used to refer to identity of the whole sequence or essential parts thereof. As noted already above, high level of amino acid identity may be limited to functionally significant domains or regions, e.g. any of the domains identified herein. In particular, homologues of the particular bryophyte-derived polypeptide sequences provided herein, are provided by the present invention, as are mutants, variants, fragments and de rivatives of such homologues. Thus the present invention also extends to polypeptides which include amino acid sequences with WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 27 Pl,3-galactosyltransferases function as defined herein and as obtainable using sequence information as provided herein. The 31,3-galactosyltransferase according to the present invention may at the amino acid level have identity with the amino acid sequences of the sequences disclosed herein, especially of Pp GalTl, PpGalT2, PpGalTlas or PpGalT2as (Figs. 2-5), of at least about 50%, or at least 55%, or at least about 60%, or at least about 65%, or at least about 70%, or at least about 75%, or at least about 80% identity, or at least about 85 %, or at least about 88% identity, or at least about 90% identity and most preferably at least about 95% or greater identity provided that such proteins have a Sl,3-galactosyltransferase activity that fits within the context of the present invention. The %identity mentioned should be preferably given in the region comprising the seven conserved domains as depicted in Fig. 1 (including ap propriate "-" as being obvious occurring to the skilled man in the art) when comparing the sequences in question to e.g. either PpGalTl, PpGalT2, PpGalTlas or PpGalT2as. In certain embodiments, an allele, variant, derivative, mutant derivative, mutant or homologue of the specific sequence may show little overall identity, e.g. at least 20%, or at least 25%, or at least 30%, or at least 35%, or at least 40% or at least 45% (i.e. say about 20%, or about 25%, or about 30%, or about 35%, or about 40%, or about 45% (i.e. being e.g. 20% or above)), with the specific sequence. However, in functionally significant domains or regions, the amino acid identity may be much higher. Putative functionally significant domains or re gions can be identified using processes of bioinformatics, in cluding comparison of the sequences of homologues. Preferred P1,3-GalT proteins according to the present invention show more than 80%, especially more than 90% identity in the seven con served domains according to Fig. 1 (amino acid residues in bold), especially preferred with the conserved amino acids (rep resented by a "*" (star) in Fig. 1) being completely (or at least to a 95% extent) present. Specifically preferred variants of the S1,3-GalT according to the present invention comprise more than 80%, preferably more than 90%, especially 100%, of the conserved amino acids as depicted in Fig. 1.
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 28 Functionally significant domains or regions of different poly peptides may be combined for expression from encoding nucleic acid as a fusion protein. For example, particularly advantageous or desirable properties of different homologues may be combined in a hybrid protein, such that the resultant expression product, with pl,3-galactosyltransferase function, may include fragments of various parent proteins, if appropriate. Identity may easily be calculated as % value of aligned se quences (including intelligent "-"). Similarity of amino acid sequences may be as defined and determined by the TBLASTN pro gram, of Altschul et al. (1990) J. Mol. Biol. 215: 403-10, which is in standard use in the art. In particular, TBLASTN 2.0 may be used with Matrix BLOSUM62 and GAP penalties: existence: 11, ex tension: 1. Another standard program that may be used is Best Fit, which is part of the Wisconsin Package, Version 8, Septem ber 1994, (Genetics Computer Group, 575 Science Drive, Madison, Wisconsin, USA, Wisconsin 53711). BestFit makes an optimal alignment of the best segment of similarity between two se quences. Optimal alignments are found by inserting gaps to max imize the number of matches using the local identity algorithm of Smith and Waterman (Adv. Apple. Math. (1981) 2: 482-489). Oth er algorithms include GAP, which uses the Needleman and Wunsch algorithm to align two complete sequences that maximizes the number of matches and minimizes the number of gaps. As with any algorithm, generally the default parameters are used, which for GAP are a gap creation penalty = 12 and gap extension penalty = 4. Alternatively, a gap creation penalty of 3 and gap extension penalty of 0.1 may be used. The algorithm FASTA (which uses the method of Pearson and Lipman (1988) PNAS USA 85: 2444-2448) is a further alternative. An advantageous method of producing recombinant host cells, in particular plant cells, or plants, respectively, consists in that the DNA molecule according to the present invention, espe cially comprising an inactivating mutation is inserted into the genome of the host cell, or plant, respectively, in the place of the non-mutant homologous sequence (Schaefer et al., 1997, Plant J.; 11(6):1195-1206). This method thus does not function with a vector, but with a pure DNA molecule. The DNA molecule according WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 29 to the present invention is inserted into the host e.g. by gene bombardment, microinjection or PEG-mediated direct DNA transfer, to mention just three examples. This DNA molecule binds to the homologous sequence in the genome of the host so that a homolog ous recombination and thus reception of the deletion, insertion or substitution mutation, respectively, will result in the gen ome: Expression of the P1,3-galactosyltransferase can e.g. be suppressed or completely blocked, respectively. A further aspect of the invention relates to plants, plant tis sues or plant cells, respectively their 1,3galactosyltrans ferase activity being less than 50%, in particular less than 20%, particularly preferred 0%, of the pl,3galactosyltransferase activity occurring in natural plants or plant cells, The advant age of these plants or plant cells, respectively, is that the glycoproteins produced by them do not comprise any or hardly comprise any p1,3-bound galactose. If products of these plants, respectively, are taken up by human or vertebrate bodies, there will be no immune reaction to the P1,3 linked galactose epitope. Preferably, recombinant plants or plant cells, respectively, are provided which have been prepared by one of the methods de scribed above, their pl,3-galactosyltransferase production being suppressed or completely blocked, respectively. The invention also relates to a PNA molecule comprising a base sequence complementary to the sequence of the DNA molecule according to the invention as well as partial sequences thereof. PNA (peptide nucleic acid) is a DNA-like sequence, the nucleo bases being bound to a pseudo-peptide backbone. PNA generally hybridizes with complementary DNA-, RNA- or PNA-oligomers by Watson-Crick base pairing and helix formation. The peptide back bone ensures a greater resistance to enzymatic degradation. The PNA molecule thus is an improved antisense agent. Neither nucle ases nor proteases are capable of attacking a PNA molecule. The stability of the PNA molecule, if bound to a complementary se quence, comprises a sufficient steric blocking of DNA and RNA polymerases, reverse transcriptase, telomerase and ribosomes. If the PNA molecule comprises the above-mentioned sequence, it will bind to the DNA or to a site of the DNA, respectively, which codes for B1,3galactosyltransferase and in this way is WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 30 capable of inhibiting transcription of this enzyme. As it is neither transcribed nor translated, the PNA molecule will be prepared synthetically, e.g. by aid of the the t-Boc technique. Advantageously, a PNA molecule is provided which comprises a base sequence which corresponds to the sequence of the inventive DNA molecule as well as partial sequences thereof. This PNA mo lecule will complex the mRNA or a site of the mRNA of 11,3 galactosyltransferase so that the translation of the enzyme will be inhibited. Similar arguments as set forth for the antisense RNA apply in this case. Thus, e.g., a particularly efficient complexing region is the translation start region or also the 5'-non-translated regions of mRNA. A further aspect of the present invention relates to a method of preparing plants, tissues, or cells, respectively, in particular plant cells which comprise a blocked expression of the 3,3galactosyltransferase on transcription or translation level, respectively, which is characterized in that inventive PNA mo lecules are inserted in the cells. To insert the PNA molecule or the PNA molecules, respectively, in the cell, again conventional methods, such as, e.g., electroporation or microinjection, are used. Particularly efficient is insertion if the PNA oligomers are bound to cell penetration peptides, e.g. transportan or pAntp (Pooga et al., 1998, Nature Biotechnology, 16; 857-861). The invention provides a method of preparing recombinant gly coproteins which is characterized in that the inventive, recom binant plants or plant cells, respectively, whose P1,3-galacto syltransferase production is suppressed or completely blocked, respectively, or plants, or tissues, or cells, respectively, in which the PNA molecules have been inserted according to the method of.the invention, are transfected with the gene that ex presses the glycoprotein so that the recombinant glycoproteins are expressed. In doing so, as has already been described above, vectors comprising genes for the desired proteins are transfec ted into the host or host cells, respectively, as has also already been described above. The transfected plant cells will express the desired proteins, and they have no or hardly any @1,3-bound galactose. Thus, they do not trigger the immune reac tions already mentioned above in the human or vertebrate body.
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 31 Any proteins may be produced in these systems. Advantageously, a method of preparing recombinant human gly coproteins is provided which is characterized in that the recom binant plants or plant cells, respectively, whose pl,3-galacto syltransferase production is suppressed or completely blocked, or plants, or tissues, or cells, respectively, in which PNA mo lecules have been inserted according to the method of the inven tion, are transfected with the gene that expresses the glycopro tein so that the recombinant glycoproteins are expressed. By this method it becomes possible to produce human proteins in plants (plant cells) which, if taken up by the human body, do not trigger any immune reaction directed against pl,3-bound galacatase residues. There, it is possible to utilize plant types for producing the recombinant glycoproteins which serve as food stuffs, e.g. banana, potato and/or tomato. The tissues of this plant comprise the recombinant glycoprotein so that, e.g. by extraction of the recombinant glycoprotein from the tissue and subsequent administration, or directly by eating the plant tissue, respectively, the recombinant glycoprotein is taken up in the human body. Preferably, a method of preparing recombinant human glycoproteins for medical use is provided, wherein the in ventive, recombinant plants or plant cells, respectively, whose pl,3-galactosyltransferase production is suppressed or com pletely blocked, respectively, or plants, or tissues, or cells, respectively, into which the PNA molecules have been inserted according to the method of the invention, are transfected with the gene that expresses the glycoprotein so that the recombinant glycoproteins are expressed. In doing so, any protein can be used which is of medical interest. Moreover, the present invention relates to recombinant glycopro teins according to a method described above, wherein they have been prepared in plant systems and wherein their peptide se quence comprises less than 50%, in particular less than 20%, particularly preferred 0%, of the p1,3-bound galactose residues occurring in proteins expressed in non-galactosyltransferase-re duced plant systems. Naturally, glycoproteins which do not com prise pl,3-bound galactose residues are to be preferred. The amount of p1,3-bound galactose will depend on the degree of the above-described suppression of the pl,3-galactosyltransferase.
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 32 Preferably, the invention relates to recombinant human glycopro teins which have been produced in plant systems according to a method described above and whose peptide sequence comprises less than 50%, in particular less than 20%, particularly preferred 0%, of the pl,3-bound galactose residues occurring in the pro teins expressed in non-galactosyltransferase-reduced plant or systems. A particularly preferred embodiment relates to recombinant human glycoproteins for medical use which have been prepared in plant systems according.to a method described above and whose peptide sequence comprises less than 50%, in particular less than 20%, particularly preferred 0%, of the p1,3-bound galactose residues occurring in the proteins expressed in non-galactosyltrans ferase-reduced plant systems. A further aspect comprises a pharmaceutical composition compris ing the glycoproteins according to the invention. In addition to the glycoproteins of the invention, the pharmaceutical composi tion comprises further additions common for such compositions. These are, e.g., suitable diluting agents of various buffer con tents (e.g. Tris-HCl, acetate, phosphate, pH and ionic strength, additives, such as tensides and solubilizers (e.g. Tween 80, Polysorbate 80), preservatives (e.g. Thimerosal, benzyl alcohol), adjuvants, antioxidants (e.g. ascorbic acid, sodium metabisulfite), emulsifiers, fillers (e.g. lactose, mannitol), covalent bonds of polymers, such as polyethylene glycol, to the protein, incorporation of the material in particulate composi tions of polymeric compounds, such as polylactic acid, poly glycolic acid, etc. or in liposomes, auxiliary agents and/or carrier substances which are suitable in the- respective treat ment. Such compositions will influence the physical condition, stability, rate of in vivo liberation and rate of in vivo excre tion of the glycoproteins of the invention. The invention also provides a method of selecting DNA molecules which code for a Pl,3-galactosyltransferase, in a sample, wherein the labelled DNA molecules of the invention are admixed to the sample, which bind to the DNA molecules that code for a WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 33 @l,3-galactosyltransferase. The hybridized DNA molecules can be detected, quantitated and selected. For the sample to contain single strand DNA with which the labelled DNA molecules can hy bridize, the sample is denatured, e.g. by heating. One possible way is to separate the DNA to be assayed, possibly after the addition of endonucleases, by gel electrophoresis on an agarose gel. After having been transferred to a membrane of nitrocellulose, the labelled DNA molecules according to the in vention are admixed which hybridize to the corresponding homo logous DNA molecule ("Southern blotting"). Another possible way consists in finding homologous genes from other species by PCR-dependent methods using specific and/or de generated primers, derived from the sequence of the DNA molecule according to the invention. Preferably, the sample for the above-identified inventive method comprises genomic DNA of a plant organism. By this method, a large number of plants is assayed in a very rapid and efficient manner for the presence of the 1,3-galactosyltransferase gene. In this manner, it is respectively possible to select plants which do not comprise this gene, or to suppress or completely block, respectively, the expression of the pl,3-galactosyltrans ferase in such plants which comprise this gene, by an above-de scribed method of the invention, so that subsequently they may be used for the transfection and production of (human) glycopro teins. The invention also relates to DNA molecules which code for a 1P,3-galactosyltransferase which have been selected according to the two last-mentioned methods and subsequently have been isol ated from the sample. These molecules can be used for further assays. They can be sequenced and in turn can be used as DNA probes for finding l,3-galactosyltransferases. These - labelled - DNA molecules will function for organisms, which are related to the organisms from which they have been isolated, more effi ciently as probes than the DNA molecules of the invention. The invention also relates to a.method of preparing "plantified" ?nmcginiemavenwC R PeabnDCCdC~W40686L5 ooas,0 - 34 carbohydrate units of human and other vertebrate glycoproteins, wherein fucose units as well as pl, 3galactosyltransferase encoded by an above-described DNA molecule are admixed to a sample that comprises a carbohydrate unit or a glycoprotein, respectively, so that galactose in B1, 3-position will be bound by the p1, 3galactosyltransferase to the carbohydrate unit or to the glycoprotein, respectively. By the method according to the invention for cloning Pl, 3galactosyltransferase it is possible to produce large amounts of purified enzyme. To obtain a fully active transferase, suitable reaction conditions are provided. The reference in this specification to any prior publication (or information derived from it), or to any matter which is known, is not, and should not be taken as an acknowledgment or admission or any form of suggestion that that prior publication (or information derived from it) or known matter forms part of the common general knowledge in the field of endeavour to which this specification relates. Throughout this specification and the claims which follow, unless the context requires otherwise, the word "comprise", and variations such as "comprises" and "comprising", will be understood to imply the inclusion of a stated integer or step or group of integers or steps but not the exclusion of any other integer or step or group of integers or steps. The invention will be explained in more detail by way of the following examples and drawing figures to which, of course, it shall not be restricted. Fig. 1 shows an amino acid alignment of Sl,3-GalT. The seven conserved domains of $1, 3-galactosyltransferases are indicated in bold letters. Conserved amino acid residues are indicated by stars. Similarities according to the reference sequence from humans (CAA75344, pl, 3-galactosyltransferase from humans) are Miseg~ihterlwovedlRPaabhDCC6000406B05..o-30a2 - 34a predicted as follows BAD17812 (putative p1, 3 galactosyltransferase from Oryza sativa) = 17%; NP 174003 (putative Pl, 3-galactosyl-transferase from Arabidopsis thaliana) = 16%; PpGa1T1 (p,3-galactosyltransferase 1 from Physcomitrella patens) g 15%; Pp-GalT2 (Pl, 3-galactosyltransferase 2 from Physcomitrella patens) 16%; Fig. 2 shows the protein sequence predicted from the coding DNA sequence of the 1, 3-galactosyltransferase 1 gene from Physcomitrella patens. The transmembrane domain is indicated in bold letters; and Fig. 3 shows the protein sequence predicted from the coding DNA sequence of the pl, 3-galactosyltransferase 2 gene from Physcomitrella patens. The transmembrane domain is indicated in bold letters. Fig. 4 shows the protein sequence of an alternative splice variant of the pl, 3-galactosyltransferase 1 gene from physcomitrella patens. The additional 55 amino acid splice insert is indicated WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 35 in bold letters. Fig. 5 shows the protein sequence of an alternative splice vari ant of the Pl,3-galactosyltransferase 2 gene form P. patens. The additional 50 amino acid splice insert is indicated in bold let ters. Examples Methods and Materials Plant material A glyco-engineered double knockout strain of Physcomitrella patens lacking fucose and xylose residues in the core structure of N-glycans was used (Koprivova et al. 2004 Plant Biotechnol. J. 2, 517-523). Standard culture conditions Plants were grown axenicallly under sterile conditions in plain inorganic liquid modified Knop medium (1000 mg/l Ca(N0 3
)
2 x 4H 2 0 250 mg/l KCl, 250 mg/i KH 2 PO4, 250 mg/l MgSO 4 x 7 H 2 0 and 12.5 mg/l FeSO 4 X 7 H 2 0; pH 5.8 (Reski and Abel (1985) Planta 165, 354-358). Plants were grown in 500 ml Erlenmeyer flasks contain ing 200 ml of culture medium and flasks were shaken on a Certo mat R shaker (B.Braun Biotech International, Germany) set at 120 rpm. Conditions in the growth chamber were 25 +/- 3 0 C and a light-dark regime of 16:8 h. The flasks were illuminated from above by two fluorescent tubes (Osram L 58 W / 25) providing 35 micromols-m-2. The cultures were subcultured once a week by dis integration using an Ultra-Turrax homogenizer (IKA, Staufen, Germany) and inoculation of two new 500 ml Erlenmeyer flasks containing 100 ml fresh Knop medium. Protoplast isolation After filtration the moss protonemata were preincubated in 0.5 M mannitol. After 30 min, 4 % Driselase (Sigma, Deisenhofen, Ger many) was added to the suspension. Driselase was dissolved in WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 36 0.5 M mannitol (pH 5.6-5.8), centrifuged at 3600 rpm for 10 min and sterilised by passage through a 0.22 microm filter (Millex GP, Millipore Corporation, USA). The suspension, containing 1% Driselase (final concentration), was incubated in the dark at RT and agitated gently (best yields of protoplasts were achieved after 2 hours of incubation) (Schaefer, "Principles and proto cols for the moss Physcomitrella patens", (May 2001) Institute of Ecology, Laboratory of Plant Cell Genetics, University of Lausanne. The suspension was passed through sieves (Wilson, CLF, Germany) with pore sizes of 100 microm and 50 microm. The sus pension was centrifuged in sterile centrifuge tubes and proto plasts were sedimented at RT for 10 min at 55 g (acceleration of 3; slow down at 3; Multifuge 3 S-R, Kendro, Germany) (Schaefer, supra). Protoplasts were gently resuspended in 3M medium(15 mM MgC1 2 x 2H20; 0.1 % MES; 0.48 M mannitol; pH 5.6; 540 mOsm; sterile filtered, Schaefer et al. (1991) Mol Gen Genet 226, 418-424). The suspension was centrifuged again at RT for 10 min at 55 g (acceleration of 3; slow down at 3; Multifuge 3 S-R, Kendro, Germany). Protoplasts were gently resuspended in 3M me dium (15 mM MgCl 2 x 2H20; 0.1 % MES; 0.48 M mannitol; pH 5.6; 540 mOsm; sterile filtered, Schaefer et al. (1991) Mol Gen Genet 226, 418-424). For counting protoplasts a small volume of the suspension was transferred to a Fuchs-Rosenthal-chamber. Transformation protocol For transformation protoplasts were incubated on ice in the dark for 30 minutes. Subsequently, protoplasts were sedimented by centrifugation at RT for 10 min at 55 g (acceleration of 3; slow down at 3; Multifuge 3 S-R, Kendro). Protoplasts were resuspen ded in 3M medium (15 mM MgCl 2 x 2H20; 0.1 % MES; 0.48 M mannitol; pH 5.6; 540 mOsm; sterile filtered, Schaefer et al. (1991) Mol Gen Genet 226, 418-424) at a concentration of 1.2 x 106 proto plasts / ml (Reutter and Reski (1996) Production of a heterolog ous protein in bioreactor cultures of fully differentiated moss plants, Pl. Tissue culture and Biotech., 2, pp. 142-147). 25 mi crolitre of this protoplast suspension were dispensed into a new sterile centrifuge tube, 5 microlitre DNA solution (column puri fied DNA in H20 (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany); 10-100 microlitre; op timal DNA amount of 6 microgram) was added and finally 25 micro- WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 37 litre PEG-solution (40% PEG 4000; 0.4 M mannitol; 0.1 M Ca(N0 3
)
2 ; pH 6 after autoclaving) was added. The suspension was immedi ately but gently mixed and then incubated for 6 min at RT with occasional gentle mixing. The suspension was diluted progress ively by adding 1, 2, 3 and 4 ml of 3M medium. The suspension was centrifuged at 200C for 10 minutes at 55 g (acceleration of 3; slow down at 3; Multifuge 3 S-R, Kendro). The pellet was re suspended in 3 ml regeneration medium (modified Knop medium; 5% glucose; 3% mannitol; 540 mOsm; pH 5.6-5.8). Regeneration was performed as described by Strepp et al. (1998) Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 95,4368-4373). Transgenic clones were identified by mo lecular screening. MALDI-Tof MS of moss glycans Plant material was cultivated in liquid culture, isolated by filtration, frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at -80 0C. The material was shipped under dry ice. The MALDI-TOF MS analyses were done in the laboratory of Prof. Dr. F. Altmann, Glycobio logy Division, Institut fir Chemie, Universitat fUr Bodenkultur, Vienna, Austria. 0.2 to 0.5 g fresh weight of transgenic Physcomitrella patens material was digested with pepsin. N-glycans were obtained from the digest as described by Wilson et al. (2001). Essentially, the glycans were released by treatment with peptide:N-glycosi dase A and analysed by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry on a DYNAMO (Thermo BioAnalysis, Santa Fe, NM). 1. Identification of p1,3-galactosyltransferase encoding genes Although biological functionality l,3-galactosyltransferases (p-1,3galT) from humans in respect to the elongation of N-glycan structures was not described the sequence of the p-1,3galT 2 (Acc.No: CAA75344) of humans was choosen as starting sequence. Based on the seven conserved domains described by Hennet (2002 Cell. Mol. Life Sci. 59, 1081-1095) and in combination with the conserved amino acids described by Amado et al. (1998 J. Biol. Chem. 273, 12770-12778) a database screening was performed. Due to this strategy one sequence from Arabidopsis thaliana (Acc.No: WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 38 NP174003) and one sequence from Oryza sativa (Acc.No: BAD17812) described as putative sl,3-galactosyltransferases were identi fied. Although for both species numerous protein sequences of putative 13,3-galactosyltransferases were listed in the public databases only these two showed similarities on the one hand for the seven conserved domains and on the other hand for several of the highly conserved additional amino acids. However, if com pared to CAA75344 the overall identity was very low for both, in case of NP174003 it was 16%, in case of BAD17812 it was 17% (Fig. 1). All three protein sequences were used for the screening of a non public "expressed sequence tag" (EST) database of Physcomitrella patens. An expressed sequence tag encoding a peptide sequence which comprised some similarities with the seven conserved do mains of the 1,3-galactosyltransfrases was identified. This EST was used to design primers for cloning purposes and for further screening in regard of a beta 1,3-galactosyltransferase gene family of a database comprising genomic sequences of Phy scomitrella patens. The resulting sequences comprised two putative 1,3-galactosyl transferase genes including intron and exon sequences and the gene structures (@-1,3galT 1 corresponds to SEQ ID NO: 1 and SEQ ID NO:3 and P-1,3galT 2 corresponds to SEQ ID NO: 2 and SEQ ID NO: 4). The protein sequences predicted from the open reading frames (P1,3-GalT 1 (Fig. 2) and 31,3-GalT 2 (Fig. 3) comprised transmembrane domains, the seven conserved domains and numerous of the conserved amino acids (Fig. 1). 1.1 Cloning of the coding sequence of 11,3-galactosyltransferase 1 gene from Physcomitrella patens Amplification of the nucleotide sequence encoding P1,3-galacto syltransferase from Physcomitrella patens (SEQ ID NO: 1: 5'AGTTGTCGATTTGTTGTTTTTGATATGTAAGGCGGT
TGCCTTCGCGCCGTGCTTGATTGTAATTGTAATTCAATCTGGAGTGTGAGATATATATATATA
TATATATATAGCGAGAGGGAGAGAGAAAGAGAGAGAGAGGGAGAGAGAAAGAGAGAGAGAGG
GAGAGAGAGAGATGGCTTGTGTATGAGGGCCATGCGAGGAGGAGGCTGTGTTTGTTGCCCGAA
GAGATGGGATGGTTTATGTGTAGTGCAGGGGTTGGATGTGAAGCACCTGTTTGAAGGAGTCT
GCGAGAGTTTGAAATTCGGATTCAGAGTGCGGCGATCGATGGTGCAACGTTGTTAGCAGTGAT-
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 39 TGTTTTCGCCAACAGAACTGACATCATTTGGATTTTTTTTACGCGTGGATGTGC
CCTCTTTTTAAAAAATTTCCGCGTGGAANAGAGACGGGGGTTTGTAATGGAGGCAGGCTGTG
GTCATCACCCCTAGTATAGCCTGTCAAGAGAGTTCAAATTCGGTAATATGAAGAGGGGGTC
GAGACTACCGGATATGGCGTGTACAGGGCGGCAAAGAAATGATCTTATCCTAGTTGCAAT
TGTTTGCTTGTTTTTTATGGTGATATTCATCCCACCATATCTCCAAATGAACTCACTTCCGGA
CATTGATTCTC
CTGATTCGGACAAGAAATCATCAAGCTACTCGAAAAAAACCACTCTAGAAGCCAATAGTAAG
GAGGAACGCCGTAGTCCGGGGAATACCACAGGCGACATTGTTTCTCTGGATGATGTGATAG
ATCGTGCCTGGTCTGCTGGTGCCAAAGCGTGGGAAGAACTGGAAACTGCGTTAAGAAATG
GAGAAGGTGTCTCAAAGAATGTCAGTAATGCCACTGCAAATGCTGATCCGTGTCCAGCAT
CACTCTCTGCAGCAGGGAAAAAGTTAGACGAATTGGGTAAAGTCTTCCCCTTGCCCTGTG
GTCTAATGTTTGGGTCAGCCATTACTCTGATTGGAAAGCCTCGAGAGGCTCACATG
GAGTACAAACCGCCAATCGCCAGAGTTGGGGAAGGCGTCTCTCCATATGTCATG
GTTTCCCAGTTCTTAGTAGAGTTACAAGGCTTAAAGGTGGTGAAAGGTGAAG
ATCCTCCTCGAATTCTACACTTGAATCCTCGACTTCGTGGTGATTGGAGCTGGAAACCCAT
CATTGAGCACAACACTTGTTATCGGAACCAGTGGGGTCCTGCCCACCGATGCGAGGGTTG
GCAAGTGCCTGAATACGAAGAAACTGTTGACGGTCTTCCCAAGTGCGAGAAGTGGCTTCGAG
ATGATGGCAAGAAACCTGCTTCAACGCAAAAATCTTGGTGGCTTGGAAGATTAGTTG
GTCGTTCTGACAAGGAGACGCTTGAATGGGAGTACCCATTATCTGAGGGTCGG
GAGTTCGTTCTCACCATTCGAGCAGGTGTTGAAGGGTTTCATGTGACTATCGATGGTCGTCA
CATCAGCTCGTTTCCTTATCGTGTGGGTTACGCTGTGGAAGAAACAACGGGGATA
TTAGTAGCAGGAGACGTTGATGTGATGTCTATCACAGTGACATCCCTACCCTTAACACATCC
TAGCTACTACCCTGAGTTAGTTTTGGAATCGGGGGACATTTGGAAGGCACCACCTGTCCCAGC
TACCAAGATAGATTTATTTATTGGGATCATGTCCAGCAGTAACCATTTTGCAGAACGGATG
GCAGTAAGGAAGACGTGGTTTCAATCTAAAGCTATTCAATCTTCGCAGGCCGTG
GCTCGCTTCTTTGTAGCTCTGCATGCAAACAAGGATATCAATATGCAGTTGAAGAAGGAG
GCAGACTATTATGGCGATATTATAATCCTGCCTTTCATCGACAGATATGATATAGTGGTTCT
CAAGACCGTTGAAATTTGCAAGTTTGGGGTCCAGAATGTCACAGCTAAGTATATTATGAAGT
GTGACGATGACACTTTTGTGAGGATTGATAGCGTTCTCGAAGAGATTCGAACTACTTCAATA
TCACAAGGCCTTTACATGGGTAGCATGAATGAGTTTCACAGGCCTCTTCGTTCTGGAAAGTGG
GCCGTGACTGCCGAGGAATGGCCTGAGCGAATTTACCCAATATATGCTAATGGACCAGGATA
TATCCTGTCAGAGGATATTGTGCATTTCATTGTGGAGATGAATGAGAGAGGCAGTTTGCAGT
TATTTAAGATGGAGGACGTCAGTGTTGGAATATGGGTACGCGAATATGCGAAGCAAGT
GAAGCACGTTCAATACGAACATAGCATACGGTTTGCTCAAGCCGGTTGTATACCGAAATACT
TGACAGCTCATTACCAATCGCCGCGTCAAATGCTGTGTCTGTGGGACAAGGTACTTGCTCAT
GACGATGGGAAATGCTGCAACTTGTGAGGAAAATACATACAATGAATGTGTTCAACG
GTCTTTACCAGACAGAATTACTTTGGGTCGGGAACCAGATATAGCAGACAGCTCA
CATTCAATTCAGCCGTGTTGATCCAGAGGGGTAATTGATAGTTTCCTTGTCCCCTACCCTCTC
TAGAGGTGGAGATCTTACAACTTAATCAAATGATCCTCTGCAATGTCACTTGTCACAATACT
TAGTATAGCTCAAAATTGGCCACGGATATTCAGGAATGTTCATCTTGTAAGGTCGCAGCTTGT-
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 40 GAGTAAATGGTTGGGTGGTGTCGATGGCATGGTTGCTTATCAATCCCTCTTAGCATCAGTG
ATCGTCAGAATCAGTGTTTTCGACACTCCCCGGTGGAGTATTTTTTCGATTCTCT
TGATTCCACTCAAGTGGTACTAGCTTATATTTAGTGAGGCCTGGAACCCAAGTAGT
TAGTTCAGTACGTCTGCCTTTTGCCGAAATGAGTAGAGTAATTTGTGGCAGTAGTTGGTGAA
GAGACATGGTTAGGATTTAGTGTTCAAAATCTG 3'; start and stop codon are indicated in bold letters) was performed by PCR with cDNA and the primers MOB1251, (SEQ ID NO: 5: 5'- CTGAATATCCGTGGCCAA -3') and primer MOB 1410 (SEQ ID NO: 6: 5'- TTCGAGCTCATGAAGAGGGGGTC GAGACT -3'). The amplification product was digested with Sac I and Msc I and cloned into the Sac I/Sma I digested vector pRT101 (Toepfer et al. 1987 NAR 15, 5890). The cloned sequence was verified by sequencing. 1.2 Cloning of the coding sequence of p1,3-galactosyltransferase 2 gene from Physcomitrella patens Amplification of the nucleotide sequence encoding s1,3-galacto syltransferase from Physcomitrella patens (SEQ ID NO: 2: 5'
ATGAAGAGGGGTGTGAGACCACCGGGTGTGGGATGTACAGGGCGGCAAAGAAACAATCTAAT
CATAGTGGCAATCATATGTTTGGTTTTTATAGCGATATTCATCCCACCGTTTCTTGAAAT
GAATTCACTTCCCGATATTGATTCCCCTGTTTTGGAGAAGAAAGTAT
CAAGCTATTTGAAAAAAGTCACTCTGGAAACTTACAGTAAAGAGGAACGCCGTAGTCCAGG
GAACACAACAGGTGACATTGTTTCGCTGGAAGATGTGATAGATCGCGCCTGGTCTGCCGGCGC
CAAAGCTTGGGAAGAGCTGGAAATTGCATTCAGACAGGGAGAACATTTTTCGAAGAAG
GACAATAATGCCAATGCAACTGCAGATCCATGCCCAGCATCACTCTTTACAACAGGAAAG
GAATTGGACAATTTAGGAAGGGTCTTCCCACTGCCTTGTGGTCTAATGTTTGGATCAGC
CATAACTCTCATTGGAAAGCCACGGGAAGCTCACATGGAGTACAAACCGCCAATCGCCAGAGT
TGGGGAAGGTGTCTCTCCATACGTCATGGTGTCCCAGTTCATAATGGAGTTACAGGGCT
TGAAGGTG
GTAAAAGGTGAAGATCCTCCTAGAATCCTCCACATAAACCCTCGACTCCGTGGTGACTG
GAGCTGGAAACCCATCATTGAGCATAATACATGCTATCGAAACCAGTGGGGCCCAGCTCATCG
GTGTGAAGGTTGGCAAGTACCTGAATACGAAGAAACCGTGGACGGTCTTCCCAAGTGC
GAGAAGTGGCTTCGAGGCGATGACAAAAAACCTGCTTCGACCCAAAAATCCTGGTGGCTTGG
GCGATTAGTTGGTCATTCCGACAAGGAGACGCTTGAATGGGAGTATCCATTGTCCGAAG
GTCGGGAGTTTGTTCTCACCATTCGAGCAGGTGTAGAAGGATTTCACTTAACTATTGATG
GTCGGCACATCAGTTCGTTCCCTTATCGTGCGGGTTATGCTATGGAAGAAGCAACAGGAATA
TCAGTGGCAGGAGACGTCGATGTTCTTTCGATGACAGTAACATCATTACCTTTAACA
CATCCCAGCTACTACCCTGAGTTGGTTTTGGATTCGGGTGATATCTGGAAGGCAC
CACCTTTACCAACAGGCAAGATAGAGTTATTTGTTGGAATCATGTCAAGCAGCAAT
CACTTTGCAGAACGTATGGCAGTAAGAAAGACGTGGTTTCAGTCTCTGGT-
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 41 TATCCAATCCTCCCAAGCGGTGGCTCGCTTCTTTGTAGCTCTGCATGCAAACAAGGATA
TCAATCTGCAGCTGAAGAAAGAGGCTGACTATTACGGCGATA
TGATAATTTTACCTTTCATCGACAGATATGATATAGTGGTTCTTAAGACCGT
TGAAATTTTCAAGTTTGGGGTCCAGAATGTTACAGTTAGCCACGTCATGAAATGTGACGAT
GACACATTTGTAAGGATTGACAGCGTTCTTGAAGAGATTCGAACGACGTCAGTAGGACAGG
GCCTTTACATGGGCAGCATGAATGAGTTTCATAGACCCCTTCGTTCTGGGAAGTGGGCCGT
GACAGTTGAGGAGTGGCCTGAGCGCATTTACCCAACATACGCAAATGGTCCAGGATA
CATCCTTTCGGAAGATATTGTGCATTTTATAGTGGAGGAGAGCAAAAGAAATAATTTGAGGT
TATTTAAGATGGAGGACGTCAGCGTAGGTATATGGGTACGCGAGTATGCAAAGAT
GAAGTACGTGCAATACGAGCATAGCGTACGGTTTGCTCAAGCCGGTTGTATACCTAACTACCT
GACAGCGCACTATCAATCGCCGCGTCAAATGCTGTGTCTGTGGGACAAGGTGCTTGCTAC
CAATGACGGCAAGTGCTGCACCTTGTGA -3'; start and stop codon are in dicated in bold letters) was performed by PCR with cDNA and the primers Pp 1-3 GalT2 for (SEQ ID NO: 7: 5'- TACGAGCTCATGAAGAGGG GTGTGAGACC -3') and primer Pp$1-3GalT2 rev (SEQ ID NO: 8: 5' GTAGAGCTCTCACAAGGTGCAGCACTTG -3'). The amplification product was digested with Sac I and cloned into the Sac I digested vector pRT101 (Toepfer et al. 1987 NAR 15, 5890). The cloned sequence was verified by sequencing. 2.1 Creating the knockout construct of the r1,3-galactosyltrans ferase 1 gene from Physcomitrella patens The knockout construct for targeted gene disruption of the p1,3 galactosyltransferase 1 gene of Physcomitrella patens was gener ated by PCR performed with genomic DNA from Physcomitrella patens. In one PCR primer MOB1336 (SEQ ID NO: 9: 5'- TACG GATCCAACTTCGAGTTCGTGTCTGTA -3') and primer MOB1333 (SEQ ID NO: 10: 5'- ACACTAAGCTTCTAATCAATGTCCGGAAGTGAG -3') were used to amp lify the 5' part of the knockout construct. In a second PCR primer MOB1334 (SEQ ID NO: 11: 5'- TTAGAAGCTTAGTGTACGCTGAGTGTC TACATTG -3') and primer MOB1335 (SEQ ID NO: 12: 5'- CATTGTCGAC CCTACACAGCTCTTAACGTCTAC -3') were used to amplify the 3' part of the knockout construct. Both amplified constructs were digested with Hin dIII (restriction sites are indicated in the primer se quences MOB1333 and MOB1334 in bold letters) and were ligated in a subsequent ligation reaction using T4 DNA ligase. The result ing ligated and purified DNA sequence was used as template for a further PCR with primer MOB1336 and MOB1335. The resulting amp lification product 1P-3GalTlko (SEQ ID NO: 13: 5'- CAACTTC- WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 42 GAGTTCGTGTCTGTATGAAGAAGTCCACGGGTTCAATGTGTTAAGACTTAGGC
ATTTCCTTCAGCTTTGCCTAGTGGAGATATGCGTATTTTTTGATTGTGAGGATTCCGGTTCT
TAGACCATGATTGGTTTATTACAGTGGTCATTCAAATCCTATTTGATTTGAGAAT
GTATTTACTTCGTTGTGTTGGGAGATGATTGTTCCCTCGAATTCTATGCGGTAGCTAC
CGCTTCTTTCGTAATGAAGACCTTTGAAGTTCACATAGACTTCAAGAAGAATGCTATTTGT
GTTTTTGTGATTGTGTGTTCAAGTTTGGTGCAGTATTGTTAAAATTTGGGTGAT
GACTAAGTACACTTTATGCGGCCCAAGTAGTCAAGTTGAGCATTTGTAAATGCTGAAATGAGT
TAGGCTGACGGTAAATGTCTGTGGATGTAGCCTAGTGATGTATTTGATCTCG
GCATAATCTTCAGTGATCAATACAAATAATTCAAGAAAGAGGGGTCAATGTGTTCCTGC
GAGTACCTTCGCATGTTCAACGTGAACTGAATTATGTTAATTAAGCTGAGCAA
CATAGACCTTCTTGCTGTTGACAGAGTTCAAATTCGGTAATATGAAGAGGGGGTCGAGACTAC
CGGATATGGCGTGTACAGGGCGGCAAAGAAATGATCTTATCCTAGTTGCAATTGTTTGCT
TGTTTTTTATGGTGATATTCATCCCACCATATCTCCAAATGAACTCACTTCCGGACAT
TGATTAGAAGCTTAGTGTACGCTGAGTGTCTACATTGTGTATTGAATGTTCCTTAGAAT
TGTTTGTTTGTTTATGTTTTTATTTTTATATTTCTGCCGGCTATTGAGGAAGAATA
CATTCAAATTGTTCAGGATTCGGACAAGAAATCATCAAGCTACTCGAAAAAAACCACTCTA
GAAGCCAATAGTAAGGAGGAACGCCGTAGTCCGGGGAATACCACAGGCGACATTGTTTCTCTG
GATGATGTGATAGATCGTGCCTGGTCTGCTGGTGCCAAAGCGTGGGAAGAACTGGAAACT
GCGTTAAGAAATGGAGAAGGTGTCTCAAAGAATGTCAGTAATGCCACTGCAAATGCTG
ATCCGTGTCCAGCATCACTCTCTGCAGCAGGGAAAAAGTTAGACGAATTGG
GTAAAGTCTTCCCCTTGCCCTGTGGTCTAATGTTTGGGTCAGCCATTACTCTGATTG
GAAAGCCTCGAGAGGCTCACATGGAGTACAAACCGCCAATCGCCAGAGTTGGGGAAG
GCGTCTCTCCATATGTCATGGTTTCCCAGTTCTTAGTAGAGTTACAAGGCTTAAAGGTGGT
GAAAGGTGAAGATCCTCCTCGAATTCTACACTTGAATCCTCGACTTCGTGGTGATTGGAGCTG
GAAACCCATCATTGAGCACAACACTTGTTATCGGAACCAGTGGGGTCCTGCCCACCGATGC
GAGGGTTGGCAAGTGCCTGAATACGAAGAAACTGGTGAGTGCTGATTCCACCGCAC
CAGTTTGTGTTTTTTATGCTGACACTATGCTTCTCAGGTTTGTAGACGTTAAGAGCTGTGTAGG -3'; Hin dIII restriction site is indicated in bold letters) comprised a deletion of 270 bp in regard to the genomic sequence of the p1,3-galactosyltransferase gene 1 of Physcomitrella patens which in addition initiate a stop codon in the early 5' part of the corresponding cDNA. Thus, resulting in a dyscfunc tional pl,3-galactosyltransferase gene when integrated via homo logous recombination into the genome of Physcomitrella patens. This knockout construct was used for transformation of Phy scomitrella patens alone or in combination with knockout con struct l-3GalT2ko (see 2.2). Screening of putative transformed plants was performed by PCR using appropriate primer combinations.
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 43 2.2 Creating the knockout construct of the 61,3-galactosyltrans ferase 2 gene from Physcomitrella patens The knockout construct for targeted gene disruption of the 1,3 galactosyltransferase 2 gene of Physcomitrella patens was gener ated by PCR performed with genomic DNA from Physcomitrella patens. In one PCR primer MOB1339 (SEQ ID NO: 14: 5'- TG GCACGATACAGTGGCATGA -3') and primer MOB1337 (SEQ ID NO: 15: 5' TGGAATTCATTCAAGAAACGGTGGGATGA -3') were used to amplify the 5' part of the knockout construct. In a second PCR primer MOB1338 (SEQ ID NO: 16: 5'- TGAATTCCATAACGAAGACACCGTCTA -3') and primer MOB1313 (SEQ ID NO: 17: 5'- CAAGCAGCGGAGACCTTGCAATGC -3') were used to amplify the 3' part of the knockout construct. Both amp lified constructs were digested with Eco RI (restriction sites are indicated in the primer sequences MOB1337 and MOB1338 in bold letters) and were ligated in a subsequent ligation reaction using T4 DNA ligase. The resulting ligated and purified DNA se quence was used as template for a further PCR with primer MOB1339 and MOB1313. The resulting amplification product 1P-3GalT2ko (SEQ ID NO: 18: 5'- TGGCACGATACAGTGGCATGAGATTTATCGCT
GCCAAACTGTGGACAATGATGTTTGAAACAGTCTATTCATCACTGGTTGGCAAATTCTAT
GTACAGGGCTAAAAGGGCCAAACTAGGCTTAACAGCAGTGATCGAGGTTCTTGAGCAGGAT
CAGCGCAAGGGTAAGGTTGCTTAGGACCGCTTCAACCTGGTGAGTTAGACACTCAAAATAAT
TACGAAACAGTGACATTTATAAGCTTTGTGTCGTCACTACTTTGAGCCTTCAGAGTA
CATTTATAGGTGGTGACTTCGTTAATGATGTTAAAAATATGAGGTGAGGACATGTCTTCTTGT
GATTAGAGTGATCACTTTGATCCTTTTGCAAACGCTGAAAGGAGTAAGTCTGATTGT
CAACAGAAATGTTTTTGGTTGCAGCCTGGCTAATATTATTGGTCTCAGTTCAATTTTCGATG
GAGTGGCGTACAAGTGATCCAGAAAGCAAGAATCATG
GATTTCCTACAATTTCATTTAGATTTTCGATGTTGGTTGAGTTATGCTGATTGATTTGGGAAA
GAGGGAGCTTAGCGTTGTATACAGGGTTCAAACACCGTAATATGAAGAGGGGTGTGAGACCAC
CGGGTGTGGGATGTACAGGGCGGCAAAGAAACAATCTAATCAT
AGTGGCAATCATATGTTTGGTTTTTATAGCGATATTCATCCCACCGTTTCTTGAAT
GAATTCCATAACGAAGACACCGTCTAAAGCTTCACAGGTTAGTGCAGAAATGATTGGTTCGC
CCTCGCTATGCCAGTCAGGCTTACTGAGTTCTACTTGGATCGTTCTACTTGGATCTTTTATG
GCTTCCTAGCAGTCGGAGGTTTCTTTCTGGTTTGAAGAAAGCCATGTATGGAACGTTTACAG
GTTTTGGAGAAGAAAGTATCAAGCTATTTGAAAAAAGTCACTCTGGAAACTTACAGTAAAGAG
GAACGCCGTAGTCCAGGGAACACAACAGGTGACATTGTTTCGCTGGAAGATGTGATAG
ATCGCGCCTGGTCTGCCGGCGCCAAAGCTTGGGAAGAGCTGGAAATTGCATTCAGACAGG-
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 44 GAGAACATTTTTCGAAGAAGGACAATAATGCCAATGCAACTGCAGATCCATGCCCAGCAT
CACTCTTTACAACAGGAAAGGAATTGGACAATTTAGGAAGGGTCTTCCCACTGCCTTGTG
GTCTAATGTTTGGATCAGCCATAACTCTCATTGGAAAGCCACGGGAAGCTCACATG
GAGTACAAACCGCCAATCGCCAGAGTTGGGGAAGGTGTCTCTCCATACGTCATGGTGTCCC
AGTTCATAATGGAGTTACAGGGCTTGAAGGTGGTAAAAGGTGAAGATCCTCCTA
GAATCCTCCACATAAACCCTCGACTCCGTGGTGACTGGAGCTGGAAACCCATCAT
TGAGCATAATACATGCTATCGAAACCAGTGGGGCCCAGCTCATCGGTGTGAAGGTTG
GCAAGTACCTGAATACGAAGAAACCGGTGAGTGCTGGTTCCAT
CACACTTTATCTTTTCATAGTGACACGGTTCTTTTTAGGTGTACTAGTGTTGAAAGCTGTGC
ATGTTAAATGGTAACCCTAATCAATCTTCTCGCTAATTTTCGCATTGCAAGGTCTCCGCTGCT
TG -3'; Eco RI restriction site is indicated in bold letters) comprised a deletion of 148 bp in regard to the genomic sequence of the s,3-galactosyltransferase 2 gene of Physcomitrella patens which in addition initiate a stop codon in the early 5' part of the corresponding cDNA. Thus, resulting in a dyscfunc tional sl,3-galactosyltransferase gene when integrated via homo logous recombination into the genome of Physcomitrella patens. This knockout construct was used for transformation of Phy scomitrella patens alone or in combination with the knockout construct l-3GalTlko (see 2.1). Screening of putative transformed plants was performed by PCR using appropriate primer combinations. 3. MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry The N-glycans of glyco-engineered Physcomitrella patens strain lacking plant-specific core al,3 fucose and P1,2 xylose residues - herein used as control - exhibit the typical structural fea tures of plant N-glycans processed in these strains as described in Koprivova et al. 2004 Plant Biotechnol. J. 2, 517-523); i.e. no fucose in al,3-linkage to the Asn-bound GlcNAc, and no xylose in p1,2-linkage to the smannosyl reidue, Lewis a epitopes (al,4 fucosyl and p1,3-galactosyl residues linked to GlcNAc) as non reducing terminal elements (tab. 1). In contrast no Lewis a epi topes (al,4-fucosyl and p1,3-galactosyl residues linked to GlcNAc) were detected on N-glycans isolated from a glyco-engin eered Physcomitrella patens strain which additionally comprised targeted gene disruptions of both s1,3-galactosyltransferase 1 and 1,3-galactosyltransferase 2 genes.
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 45 Physcomitrella patens Physcomitrella patens double knockout tetra knockout N-glycan structures lacking core N-glycan structures lacking core Cl,3-fucose and 1l,2-xylose al,3-fucose, 1,2-xylose and 31,3 residues galactose residues (consequently lacking Lewis a epitopes in total) 933 Man3 (MM)' Man3 (MM) 1096 Man4 Man4 1137 MGn/GnM MGn/GnM 1258 Man5 Man5 1299 Man4Gn Man4Gn 1340 GnGn GnGn 1420 Man6 Man6 1582 Man7 Man7 1648 (GF)Gn/Gn(GF) 1744 Man8 Man8 1907 Man9 Man9 1956 (GF) (GF) Tab.1: N-glycan structures of double knockout and tetra knockout Physcomitrella patens strains. N-glycans were isolated from plant material grown under same conditions (100 ml flasks, Knop medium) residues, GF = Lewis a structure comprising fucose and galactose (1,3-linked), Gn = N-acetylglucosamine, M/Man = man nose WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 46 SEQ ID NO: 1 cDNA 1P-3GalT1 5'AGTTGTCGATTTGTTGTTTTTGATATGTAAGGCGGTTGCCTTCGCGCCGTGCTTGATTGTAAT
TGTAATTCAATCTGGAGTGTGAGATATATATATATATATATATATAGCGAGAGGGAGAGAGAAAGAGAGAGAGAGG
GAGAGAGAAAGAGAGAGAGAGGGAGAGAGAGAGATGGCTTGTGTATGAGGGCCATGCGAGGAGGAGGCTGT
GTTTGTTGCCCGAAGAGATGGGATGGTTTATGTGTAGTGCAGGGGTTGGATGTGAAGCACCTGTTTGAAGGAGTCT
GCGAGAGTTTGAAATTCGGATTCAGAGTGCGGCGATCGATGGTGCAACGTTGTTAGCAGTGATTGTTTTCGC
CAACAGAACTGACATCATTTGGATTTTTTTTACGCGTGGATGTGCCCTCTTTTTAAAAAATTTCCGCGTGGAANA
GAGACGGGGGTTTGTAATGGAGGCAGGCTGTGGTCATCACCCCTAGTATAGCCTGTCAAGAGAGTTCAAATTCG
GTAATATGAAGAGGGGGTCGAGACTACCGGATATGGCGTGTACAGGGCGGCAAAGAAATGATCTTATCCTAGT
TGCAATTGTTTGCTTGTTTTTTATGGTGATATTCATCCCACCATATCTCCAAATGAACTCACTTCCGGACAT
TGATTCTC
CTGATTCGGACAAGAAATCATCAAGCTACTCGAAAAAAACCACTCTAGAAGCCAATAGTAAGGAGGAACGC
CGTAGTCCGGGGAATACCACAGGCGACATTGTTTCTCTGGATGATGTGATAGATCGTGCCTGGTCTGCTGGTGC
CAAAGCGTGGGAAGAACTGGAAACTGCGTTAAGAAATGGAGAAGGTGTCTCAAAGAATGTCAGTAATGCCACT
GCAAATGCTGATCCGTGTCCAGCATCACTCTCTGCAGCAGGGAAAAAGTTAGACGAATTGGGTAAAGTCTTCCCCT
TGCCCTGTGGTCTAATGTTTGGGTCAGCCATTACTCTGATTGGAAAGCCTCGAGAGGCTCACATGGAGTACAAAC
CGCCAATCGCCAGAGTTGGGGAAGGCGTCTCTCCATATGTCATGGTTTCCCAGTTCTTAGTAGAGTTACAAGGCT
TAAAGGTGGTGAAAGGTGAAGATCCTCCTCGAATTCTACACTTGAATCCTCGACTTCGTGGTGATTGGAGCTG
GAAACCCATCATTGAGCACAACACTTGTTATCGGAACCAGTGGGGTCCTGCCCACCGATGCGAGGGTTGGCAAGT
GCCTGAATACGAAGAAACTGTTGACGGTCTTCCCAAGTGCGAGAAGTGGCTTCGAGATGATGGCAAGAAACCT
GCTTCAACGCAAAAATCTTGGTGGCTTGGAAGATTAGTTGGTCGTTCTGACAAGGAGACGCTTGAATGGGAGTAC
CCATTATCTGAGGGTCGGGAGTTCGTTCTCACCATTCGAGCAGGTGTTGAAGGGTTTCATGTGACTATCGATG
GTCGTCACATCAGCTCGTTTCCTTATCGTGTGGGTTACGCTGTGGAAGAAACAACGGGGATATTAGTAGCAG
GAGACGTTGATGTGATGTCTATCACAGTGACATCCCTACCCTTAACACATCCTAGCTACTACCCTGAGT
TAGTTTTGGAATCGGGGGACATTTGGAAGGCACCACCTGTCCCAGCTACCAAGATAGATTTATTTATTGGGATCAT
GTCCAGCAGTAACCATTTTGCAGAACGGATGGCAGTAAGGAAGACGTG
GTTTCAATCTAAAGCTATTCAATCTTCGCAGGCCGTGGCTCGCTTCTTTGTAGCTCTGCATGCAAACAAGGATA
TCAATATGCAGTTGAAGAAGGAGGCAGACTATTATGGCGATATTATAATCCTGCCTTTCATCGACAGATATGATA
TAGTGGTTCTCAAGACCGTTGAAATTTGCAAGTTTGGGGTCCAGAATGTCACAGCTAAGTATATTATGAAGTGT
GACGATGACACTTTTGTGAGGATTGATAGCGTTCTCGAAGAGATTCGAACTACTTCAATATCACAAGGCCTTTA
CATGGGTAGCATGAATGAGTTTCACAGGCCTCTTCGTTCTGGAAAGTGGGCCGTGACTGCCGAGGAATGGCCT
GAGCGAATTTACCCAATATATGCTAATGGACCAGGATATATCCTGTCAGAGGATATTGTGCATTTCATTGTGGAG
ATGAATGAGAGAGGCAGTTTGCAGTTATTTAAGATGGAGGACGTCAGTGTTGGAATATGGGTACGCGAATA
TGCGAAGCAAGTGAAGCACGTTCAATACGAACATAGCATACGGTTTGCTCAAGCCGGTTGTATACCGAAATACT
TGACAGCTCATTACCAATCGCCGCGTCAAATGCTGTGTCTGTGGGACAAGGTACTTGCTCATGACGATGGGAAAT
GCTGCAACTTGTGAGGAAAATACATACAATGAATGTGTTCAACGGTCTTTACCAGACAGAATTACTTTGGGTCGG
GAACCAGATATAGCAGACAGCTCACATTCAATTCAGCCGTGTTGATCCAGAGGGGTAATTGATAGTTTCCT-
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 47 TGTCCCCTACCCTCTCTAGAGGTGGAGATCTTACAACTTAATCAAATGATCCTCTGCAATGTCACTTGT
CACAATACTTAGTATAGCTCAAAATTGGCCACGGATATTCAGGAATGTTCATCTTGTAAGGTCGCAGCTTGT
GAGTAAATGGTTGGGTGGTGTCGATGGCATGGTTGCTTATCAATCCCTCTTAGCATCAGTGATCGTCAGAATCAGT
GTTTTCGACACTCCCCGGTGGAGTATTTTTTCGATTCTCTTGATTCCACTCAAGTGGTACTAGCTTATATTTAGT
GAGGCCTGGAACCCAAGTAGTTAGTTCAGTACGTCTGCCTTTTGCCGAAATGAGTAGAGTAATTTGTGGCAGTAGT
TGGTGAAGAGACATGGTTAGGATTTAGTGTTCAAAATCTG 3' SEQ ID NO: 2 cDNA Pppl-3GalT2
ATGAAGAGGGGTGTGAGACCACCGGGTGTGGGATGTACAGGGCGGCAAAGAAACAATCTAAT
CATAGTGGCAATCATATGTTTGGTTTTTATAGCGATATTCATCCCACCGTTTCTTGAAAT
GAATTCACTTCCCGATATTGATTCCCCTGTTTTGGAGAAGAAAGTAT
CAAGCTATTTGAAAAAAGTCACTCTGGAAACTTACAGTAAAGAGGAACGCCGTAGTCCAGG
GAACACAACAGGTGACATTGTTTCGCTGGAAGATGTGATAGATCGCGCCTGGTCTGCCGGCGC
CAAAGCTTGGGAAGAGCTGGAAATTGCATTCAGACAGGGAGAACATTTTTCGAAGAAG
GACAATAATGCCAATGCAACTGCAGATCCATGCCCAGCATCACTCTTTACAACAGGAAAG
GAATTGGACAATTTAGGAAGGGTCTTCCCACTGCCTTGTGGTCTAATGTTTGGATCAGC
CATAACTCTCATTGGAAAGCCACGGGAAGCTCACATGGAGTACAAACCGCCAATCGCCAGAGT
TGGGGAAGGTGTCTCTCCATACGTCATGGTGTCCCAGTTCATAATGGAGTTACAGGGCT
TGAAGGTG
GTAAAAGGTGAAGATCCTCCTAGAATCCTCCACATAAACCCTCGACTCCGTGGTGACTG
GAGCTGGAAACCCATCATTGAGCATAATACATGCTATCGAAACCAGTGGGGCCCAGCTCATCG
GTGTGAAGGTTGGCAAGTACCTGAATACGAAGAAACCGTGGACGGTCTTCCCAAGTGC
GAGAAGTGGCTTCGAGGCGATGACAAAAAACCTGCTTCGACCCAAAAATCCTGGTGGCTTGG
GCGATTAGTTGGTCATTCCGACAAGGAGACGCTTGAATGGGAGTATCCATTGTCCGAAG
GTCGGGAGTTTGTTCTCACCATTCGAGCAGGTGTAGAAGGATTTCACTTAACTATTGATG
GTCGGCACATCAGTTCGTTCCCTTATCGTGCGGGTTATGCTATGGAAGAAGCAACAGGAATA
TCAGTGGCAGGAGACGTCGATGTTCTTTCGATGACAGTAACATCATTACCTTTAACA
CATCCCAGCTACTACCCTGAGTTGGTTTTGGATTCGGGTGATATCTGGAAGGCAC
CACCTTTACCAACAGGCAAGATAGAGTTATTTGTTGGAATCATGTCAAGCAGCAAT
CACTTTGCAGAACGTATGGCAGTAAGAAAGACGTGGTTTCAGTCTCTGGT
TATCCAATCCTCCCAAGCGGTGGCTCGCTTCTTTGTAGCTCTGCATGCAAACAAGGATA
TCAATCTGCAGCTGAAGAAAGAGGCTGACTATTACGGCGATA
TGATAATTTTACCTTTCATCGACAGATATGATATAGTGGTTCTTAAGACCGT
TGAAATTTTCAAGTTTGGGGTCCAGAATGTTACAGTTAGCCACGTCATGAAATGTGACGAT GACACATTTGTAAGGATTGACAGCGTTCTTGAAGAGATTCGAACGACGTCAGTAGGACAGG
GCCTTTACATGGGCAGCATGAATGAGTTTCATAGACCCCTTCGTTCTGGGAAGTGGGCCGT-
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 48 GACAGTTGAGGAGTGGCCTGAGCGCATTTACCCAACATACGCAAATGGTCCAGGATA CATCCTTTCGGAAGATATTGTGCATTTTATAGTGGAGGAGAGCAAAAGAAATAATTTGAGGT TATTTAAGATGGAGGACGTCAGCGTAGGTATATGGGTACGCGAGTATGCAAAGAT GAAGTACGTGCAATACGAGCATAGCGTACGGTTTGCTCAAGCCGGTTGTATACCTAACTACCT GACAGCGCACTATCAATCGCCGCGTCAAATGCTGTGTCTGTGGGACAAGGTGCTTGCTAC CAATGACGGCAAGTGCTGCACCTTGTGA SEQ ID NO: 3 Genomic DNA 1P-3GalT1 5':AGTTGTCGATTTGTTGTTTTTGATATGTAAGGCGGTTGCCTTCGCGCCGTGCTTGATTGTAAT
TGTAATTCAATCTGGAGTGTGAGATATATATATATATATATATATAGCGAGAGGGAGAGAGAAAGAGAGAGAGAGG
GAGAGAGAAAGAGAGAGAGAGGGAGAGAGAGAGATGGCTTGTGTATGAGGGCCATGCGAGGAGGAGGCTGT
GTTTGTTGCCCGAAGAGATGGGATGGTTTATGTGTAGTGCAGGGGTTGGATGTGAAGCACCTGTTTGAAGGAGTCT
GCGAGAGTTTGAAATTCGGATTCAGAGTGCGGCGATCGATGGTGCAACGTTGTTAGCAGTGATTGTTTTCGC
CAACAGAACTGACATgtaatgaatagtttcgaggcatgatcgcggtttttctcaatttgaaggggttgtttgtgg gtgatctatgtgcagaagtgtcactgatggtcagattcgatgcttgacaatttgatcctttgtgagtgtgcagC
ATTTGGATTTTTTTTACGCGTGGATGTGCCCTCTTTTTAAAAAATTTCCGCGTGGAAAAGAGACGGGG
GTTTGTAATGGAGGCAGGCTGTGGTCATCACCCCTAGTATAGCCTGTCAAGAGgtgagattgacaccctctttgct caattgtagatttttttccttctcagggct gaatcccagtttttttttttttttttttttttttttccttcttcttcaacttcgagttcgtgtctgtat gaagaagtccacgggttcaatgtgttaagacttaggcatttccttcagctttgcctagtggagata tgcgtattttttgattgtgaggattccggttcttagaccatgattggtttattacagtggt cattcaaatcctatttgatttgagaatgtatttacttcgttgtgttgggagatgattgttccctcgaattctat gcggtagctaccgcttctttcgtaatgaagacctttgaagttcacatagacttcaagaagaatgctatttgt gtttttgtgattgtgtgttcaagtttggtgcagtattgttaaaatttgggtgatgactaagtacactttatgcggc ccaagtagtcaagttgagcatttgtaaatgctgaaatgagttaggctgacggtaaatgtctgtggatgtagccta gtgatgtatttgatctcggcataatcttcagtgatcaatacaaataattcaagaaagaggggtcaatgtgttcct gcgagtaccttcgcatgttcaacgtgaactgaattatgttaattaagctgagcaacatagaccttcttgctgt tgacagAGTTCAAATTCGGTAATATGAAGAGGGGGTCGAGACTACCGGATATGGCGTGTACAGGGCG
GCAAAGAAATGATCTTATCCTAGTTGCAATTGTTTGCTTGTTTTTTATGGTGATATTCATCCCACCATA
TCTCCAAATGAACTCACTTCCGGACATTGATTCTCCTgtcgagaagctagaagatgatgatgatgct gtcttcacttctcatagacgtcgtaaccaagagcagatttcagttgtcactgacagtggtcagagacggacagt tatgccatcttcgactggtgcggaggacgtaacgaatgcaccgtctaaagattcacaggttagaccaaaagtagt tgacctgaaatgcatgtggtaatcaagcactcttgtccttattcgagcttttatttcttgccatcag gtatttttaatacttccctagtgtacgctgagtgtctacattgtgtattgaatgttccttagaat tgtttgtttgtttatgtttttatttttatatttctgccggctattgaggaagaatacattcaaattgttcag
GATTCGGACAAGAAATCATCAAGCTACTCGAAAAAAACCACTCTAGAAGCCAATAGTAAGGAGGAACGC-
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 49 CGTAGTCCGGGGAATACCACAGGCGACATTGTTTCTCTGGATGATGTGATAGATCGTGCCTGGTCTGCTGGTGC
CAAAGCGTGGGAAGAACTGGAAACTGCGTTAAGAAATGGAGAAGGTGTCTCAAAGAATGTCAGTAATGCCACT
GCAAATGCTGATCCGTGTCCAGCATCACTCTCTGCAGCAGGGAAAAAGTTAGACGAATTGGGTAAAGTCTTCCCCT
TGCCCTGTGGTCTAATGTTTGGGTCAGCCATTACTCTGATTGGAAAGCCTCGAGAGGCTCACATGGAGTACAAAC
CGCCAATCGCCAGAGTTGGGGAAGGCGTCTCTCCATATGTCATGGTTTCCCAGTTCTTAGTAGAGTTACAAGGCT
TAAAGGTGGTGAAAGGTGAAGATCCTCCTCGAATTCTACACTTGAATCCTCGACTTCGTGGTGATTGGAGCTG
GAAACCCATCATTGAGCACAACACTTGTTATCGGAACCAGTGGGGTCCTGCCCACCGATGCGAGGGTTGGCAAGT
GCCTGAATACGAAGAAACTGgtgagtgctgattccaccgcaccagtttgtgttttttatgctgacactatgcttct caggtttgtagacgttaagagctgtgtaggttccgtggtacttcgaattggcacttgccacttctctcat tgtaagttggtaaatgtctgcatgagcaataaattccaacactggatgtgtattttctgaaatgattcgttttct tgtagTTGACGGTCTTCCCAAGTGCGAGAAGTGGCTTCGAGATGATGGCAAGAAACCTGCTTCAACGCAAAAATCT
TGGTGGCTTGGAAGATTAGTTGGTCGTTCTGACAAGGAGACGCTTGAATGGGAGTACCCATTATCTGAGGGTCGG
GAGTTCGTTCTCACCATTCGAGCAGGTGTTGAAGGGTTTCATGTGACTATCGATGGTCGTCACAT
CAGCTCGTTTCCTTATCGTGTGgtaagttgaaaatgctatgttaacatataatgctaaagttgacctcat gtctttcttttttctttttttcttttttattttctggagggggggggggtaatgcaaat caactctaaaattttagtataccagttaaattattcatttcaaatataacaatacaaataca catctttttaatttgtattttttgatccctctcctcctctactaaaattaataatatagcaacattttggtac tacgaaagttcatttgtattgcttcatgtcgaagatttattcaaaatttctatccctcgtgtttctgaattacat tatcaacaatggaataacaataatgacggccccatccttcagacaccaggaacattacctataccagactacgtct gggtaagtctgaagaattaattataaccaagaaactagttgtattcactgtttttctttttacgcccat gcgatttatcgaagtcttcttcaatttcttattattcttctttattattttaagtttttaat tatttttaaagcaacgaattgataaataaataacatattaat gtttttaactttaaagtttttttcccgtatttagtataagatttcgtcaaaacgattaggtgattagatcgaacat tatctaattgcactctacttatatgatatgaagagtaatttctcttagcagaagctacatcctgctatttccttgg gaaacccgattaggtctttcaaatcacccctgcttcctctataagtgtaccatgattgaggttcgttagggc attagtttaagggtatcgttgtgatgtgtgtctagttagtcttaaaatctgtgcaaatcgattcat taacaactcttttctgtagtgttttgttttgagaactgctatttatcttccattgtgcagGGTTACGCTGTG
GAAGAAACAACGGGGATATTAGTAGCAGGAGACGTTGATGTGATGTCTATCACAGTGACATCCCTACCCTTAACA
CATCCTAGCTACTACCCTGAGTTAGTTTTGGAATCGGGGGACATTTGGAAGGCACCACCTGTCCCAGCTAC
CAAGATAGATTTATTTATTGGGATCATGTCCAGCAGTAACCATTTTGCAGAACGGATGGCAGTAAGGAAGACGTG
GTTTCAATCTAAAGCTATTCAATCTTCGCAGGCCGTGGCTCGCTTCTTTGTAGCTCTGgtacttcctcctat caaatctcattaactttcgaattattagtgatcatctacataagtggtctgttgattgctgaaaggtggctgt tgcgtgcctttgcgtaatgactttccaaattcatttagaacagtggaaacataatttgtgtgttgcgt tgcgtatttaactttttcggtgaatgtcttattgaattgtgatgtagCATGCAAACAAGGATATCAATATGCAGT
TGAAGAAGGAGGCAGACTATTATGGCGATATTATAATCCTGCCTTTCATCGACAGATATGATATAGTGGTTCT
CAAGACCGTTGAAATTTGCAAGTTTGGGgtacgtgtgtcgaataatggcttcaaagctttgtgacggtgtct gcaatttggggatggtgataatgaggcttgataccaactgaaggttaggtgacttttaacactaggttctgct tactgtgcagGTCCAGAATGTCACAGCTAAGTATATTATGAAGTGTGACGATGACACTTTTGTGAGGAT
TGATAGCGTTCTCGAAGAGATTCGAACTACTTCAATATCACAAGGCCTTTACATGGGTAGCATGAAT
GAGTTTCACAGGCCTCTTCGTTCTGGAAAGTGGGCCGTGACTGCCGAGgtatttttatttttatttttg- WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 50 gcttttgtcgggaacgtgagagaaaccaagatgaatataatcacgatgttgttttttattgcaaggatttatttg atgctcttgagaaatctgtggtagccataccactcaatttggatactagatgtgttcgtccttatgtataaaaat gaaacatgtgcttttcaggaagattaattcagtttgacttgtacgtctagttagattgatggtgatgaaacaagag gattatctcgcgaattgacaagtgggttgcttggacagGAATGGCCTGAGCGAATTTACCCAATATATGT
-TG
GACCAGGATATATCCTGTCAGAGGATATTGTGCATTTCATTGTGGAGATGAATGAGAGAGGCAGTTTGCAGgtag gttcttttagaactgtgtcgtcgctattacacgtctacaagttttaaaaattagaaactttcttgttg gcaaatttccatccaggaatctttttgcaccgcaagttcgtaataggagtcggtacattctgtgtgtgt gcatcgtttgttaaatgcatttttcaattttcttttgcttaaaatatctctgttgtcgatatctcctcatgatct tgcattgtgaacatgagaagatatgaaatgtgaactcaatattcttctatgatcatgtgcagTTATTTAAGATG
GAGGACGTCAGTGTTGGAATATGGGTACGCGAATATGCGAAGCAAGTGAAGCACGTTCAATACGAA
CATAGCATACGGTTTGCTCAAGCCGGTTGTATACCGAAATACTTGACAGCTCATTACCAATCGCCGCGTCAAAT
GCTGTGTCTGTGGGACAAGGTACTTGCTCATGACGATGGGAAATGCTGCAACTTGTGAGGAAAATACATACAAT
GAATGTGTTCAACGGTCTTTACCAGACAGAATTACTTTGGGTCGGGAACCAGATATAGCAGACAGCTCA
CATTCAATTCAGCCGTGTTGATCCAGAGGGGTAATTGATAGTTTCCTTGTCCCCTACCCTCTCTAGAGGTGGAG
ATCTTACAACTTAATCAAATGATCCTCTGCAATGTCACTTGTCACAATACTTAGTATAGCTCAAAATTGGCCACG
GATATTCAGGAATGTTCATCTTGTAAGGTCGCAGCTTGTGAGTAAATGGTTGGGTGGTGTCGATGGCATGGTTGCT
TATCAATCCCTCTTAGCATCAGTGATCGTCAGAATCAGTGTTTTCGACACTCCCCGGTG
GAGTATTTTTTCGATTCTCTTGATTCCACTCAAGTGGTACTAGCTTATATTTAGTGAGGCCTGGAACCCAAGTAGT
TAGTTCAGTACGTCTGCCTTTTGCCGAAATGAGTAGAGTAATTTGTGGCAGTAGTTGGTGAAGAGACATGGTTAG
GATTTAGTGTTCAAAATCTG 3' SEQ ID NO: 4 Genomic DNA Pppl-3GalT2
ATGAAGAGGGGTGTGAGACCACCGGGTGTGGGATGTACAGGGCGGCAAAGAAACAATCTAATCATAGTGGCAAT
CATATGTTTGGTTTTTATAGCGATATTCATCCCACCGTTTCTTGAAATGAATTCACTTCCCGATATTGATTCCCCT
gtgtataggttagaaggtattaacttcgcttcacatagacgtcgctatcaagaacaggattcacgtgtcagt tacagtggctatggacagccagatatgccatcaactggtgatgaagacataacgaagacac cgtctaaagcttcacaggttagtgcagaaatgattggttcgccctcgctatgccagtcaggcttactgagttc tacttggatcgttctacttggatcttttatggcttcctagcagtcggaggtttctttctggtttgaagaaagccat gtatggaacgtttacagGTTTTGGAGAAGAAAGTATCAAGCTATTTGAAAAAAGTCACTCTGGAAACT
TACAGTAAAGAGGAACGCCGTAGTCCAGGGAACACAACAGGTGACATTGTTTCGCTGGAAGATGTGATAG
ATCGCGCCTGGTCTGCCGGCGCCAAAGCTTGGGAAGAGCTGGAAATTGCATTCAGACAGGGAGAA
CATTTTTCGAAGAAGGACAATAATGCCAATGCAACTGCAGATCCATGCCCAGCATCACTCTTTACAACAGGAAAG
GAATTGGACAATTTAGGAAGGGTCTTCCCACTGCCTTGTGGTCTAATGTTTGGATCAGCCATAACTCTCATTG
GAAAGCCACGGGAAGCTCACATGGAGTACAAACCGCCAATCGCCAGAGTTGGGGAAGGTGTCTCTCCATACGTCAT
GGTGTCCCAGTTCATAATGGAGTTACAGGGCTTGAAGGTGGTAAAAGGTGAAGATCCTCCTAGAATCCTCCA
CATAAACCCTCGACTCCGTGGTGACTGGAGCTGGAAACCCATCATTGAGCATAATACATGCTATCGAAACCAGT-
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 51 GGGGCCCAGCTCATCGGTGTGAAGGTTGGCAAGTACCTGAATACGAAGAAACCGgtgagtgctggttccat cacactttatcttttcatagtgacacggttctttttaggtgtactagtgttgaaagctgtgcatgttaaatg gtaaccctaatcaatcttctcgctaattttcgcattgcaaggtctccgctgcttggacaatcagcactctaacat tggctgtatttactgaaatgattctttactttgtagTGGACGGTCTTCCCAAGTGCGAGAAGTGGCTTCGAGGCG
ATGACAAAAAACCTGCTTCGACCCAAAAATCCTGGTGGCTTGGGCGATTAGTTGGTCATTCCGACAAGGAGACGCT
TGAATGGGAGTATCCATTGTCCGAAGGTCGGGAGTTTGTTCTCACCATTCGAGCAGGTGTAGAAGGATTTCACT
TAACTATTGATGGTCGGCACATCAGTTCGTTCCCTTATCGTGCGgtgagttgaaaatactagtttgatatctaatg atgaggtttaccgcaggtatatttggtctcattgtcaagtgtgtgtgtgtgtgt tgtttttcttttttccttttcattttctgaatcataatgataagaaatcaattctatgaaacttagcgtcaata ttttaaagttttattgtttttgtttgtttttatttttttgtgttttgtgttttgtgtttatttcacaatacaatgt taacaatggaatagaaacaatgatggtcccacctcacagacaccaggtacactacctacaccagactgcgtct gagtaagtttaagaaacagcaaccaccaacaatctgattgtaaattctaaattccttctccaccagaaaaccatgt gatccgtcttgcagttctgcttgcactctacctatatgatccaaagagtaattcctcttaacaggagttataacct gctggggttttgaaaataccgatgagttcaaattgtaaacaaaccccggatctatttcaagggtatgaagggct tagctttgtttaagaataaggtcaagagtatctgtgtggtgagcatcccaaaatggatgcaaatttgttaattg gcaactgttttctgtggtatgttttgtgacgcactatttattgtgtattgtgcagGGTTATGCTATG
GAAGAAGCAACAGGAATATCAGTGGCAGGAGACGTCGATGTTCTTTCGATGACAGTAACATCATTACCTTTAACA
CATCCCAGCTACTACCCTGAGTTGGTTTTGGATTCGGGTGATATCTGGAAGGCACCACCTTTACCAACAG
GCAAGATAGAGTTATTTGTTGGAATCATGTCAAGCAGCAATCACTTTGCAGAACGTATGGCAGTAAGAAAGACGTG
GTTTCAGTCTCTGGTTATCCAATCCTCCCAAGCGGTGGCTCGCTTCTTTGTAGCTCTGgtacttgtcat tatactcttttttcgtgccaagtatcgtgaactcgggaatatttaaaaagtgcaaacaacaagtgagctgttaat tgctgaaaattggtgttataagtcttgatgcagtgaccttccagattgaccaagtatatcagacct tagaatttgaacagcactacttacttaccatttttaatgaatcccttgttgggttgtgatgcagCATGCAAACAAG
GATATCAATCTGCAGCTGAAGAAAGAGGCTGACTATTACGGCGATATGATAATTTTACCTTTCATCGACAGATA
TGATATAGTGGTTCTTAAGACCGTTGAAATTTTCAAGTTTGGGgtaagcgaat taaaatttgtagtatttacaaagtaatatttttaaacgttgtgaggacatctgcaacttgatatatttctttcgt gaggttcgatgctgattaaagcttaggtgatttaaaagcacggtgttgcttgctatgcagGTCCAGAATGT
TACAGTTAGCCACGTCATGAAATGTGACGATGACACATTTGTAAGGATTGACAGCGTTCTTGAA
GAGATTCGAACGACGTCAGTAGGACAGGGCCTTTACATGGGCAGCATGAATGAGTTTCATAGACCCCTTCGTTCT
GGGAAGTGGGCCGTGACAGTTGAGgtaattttccctgtaccaaattatccaagattttcgtaaccattgtgtgcct tattcatttcttctgaaatctcaagaaaaatgaaaaatgcttgagaaacgctcgtagccgtatcacattat gcgaattccaaaaaagaatgtggaacaaaagttcttgtgaaaataattgatatgttcaaattgtacacatttat gcactaagataagatatgtgcaaatagtgccttccagtggtctagaaaatgcttgtttttttttg gaagctttaactttatttagcttgaacatcttgtttgagggttggtgaccaagtaagaag gtccatacaagacaataaatggattggttcgtgcatgtacagGAGTGGCCTGAGCGCATTTACCCAA
CATACGCAAATGGTCCAGGATACATCCTTTCGGAAGATATTGTGCATTTTATAGTGGAGGA
GAGCAAAAGAAATAATTTGAGGgtgcgtttttcatagctgtgtcctggtgattaaatgccccatgttcaacat tgaaaccttcatcttggacagttttccatccatgtatctcctgtcattataattgcattatagaactgttcgcgt gtacatgtttcctgttcctctttttcattttctttttcttcttttcttcatttacttctcctcttgtcgat gctttctgttgaccttatattgtggatatgtatctcttcagtactacggagacgatatgaaacataagtttgata- WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 52 ttcttctgtgataaagcgcagTTATTTAAGATGGAGGACGTCAGCGTAGGTATATGGGTACGCGAGTATGCAAAG
ATGAAGTACGTGCAATACGAGCATAGCGTACGGTTTGCTCAAGCCGGTTGTATACCTAACTACCT
GACAGCGCACTATCAATCGCCGCGTCAAATGCTGTGTCTGTGGGACAAGGTGCTTGCTACCAATGACGGCAAGT
GCTGCACCTTGTGA SEQ ID NO. 24 cDNA 01,3-GalT1 alternative splice variant 165 nucleotide splice insert shown in bold letters (nt471-635) ATGCGAGGAGGAGGCTGTGTTTGTTGCCCGAAGAGATGGGATGGTTTATG TGTAGTGCAGGGGTTGGATGTGAAGCACCTGTTTGAAGGAGTCTGCGAGA GTTTGAAATTCGGATTCAGAGTGCGGCGATCGATGGTGCAACGTTGTTAG CAGTGATTGTTTTCGCCAACAGAACTGACATCATTTGGATTTTTTTTACG CGTGGATGTGCCCTCTTTTTAAAAAATTTCCGCGTGGAAAAGAGACGGGG GTTTGTAATGGAGGCAGGCTGTGGTCATCACCCCTAGTATAGCCTGTCAA GAGAGTTCAAATTCGGTAATATGAAGAGGGGGTCGAGACTACCGGATATG GCGTGTACAGGGCGGCAAAGAAATGATCTTATCCTAGTTGCAATTGTTTG CTTGTTTTTTATGGTGATATTCATCCCACCATATCTCCAAATGAACTCAC TTCCGGACATTGATTCTCCTGTCGAGAAGCTAGAAGATGATGATGATGCT GTCTTCACTTCTCATAGACGTCGTAACCAAGAGCAGATTTCAGTTGTCAC TGACAGTGGTCAGAGACGGACAGTTATGCCATCTTCGACTGGTGCGGAGG ACGTAACGAATGCACCGTCTAAAGATTCACAGGATTCGGACAAGAAATCA TCAAGCTACTCGAAAAAAACCACTCTAGAAGCCAATAGTAAGGAGGAACG CCGTAGTCCGGGGAATACCACAGGCGACATTGTTTCTCTGGATGATGTGA TAGATCGTGCCTGGTCTGCTGGTGCCAAAGCGTGGGAAGAACTGGAAACT GCGTTAAGAAATGGAGAAGGTGTCTCAAAGAATGTCAGTAATGCCACTGC AAATGCTGATCCGTGTCCAGCATCACTCTCTGCAGCAGGGAAAAAGTTAG ACGAATTGGGTAAAGTCTTCCCCTTGCCCTGTGGTCTAATGTTTGGGTCA GCCATTACTCTGATTGGAAAGCCTCGAGAGGCTCACATGGAGTACAAACC GCCAATCGCCAGAGTTGGGGAAGGCGTCTCTCCATATGTCATGGTTTCCC AGTTCTTAGTAGAGTTACAAGGCTTAAAGGTGGTGAAAGGTGAAGATCCT CCTCGAATTCTACACTTGAATCCTCGACTTCGTGGTGATTGGAGCTGGAA ACCCATCATTGAGCACAACACTTGTTATCGGAACCAGTGGGGTCCTGCCC ACCGATGCGAGGGTTGGCAAGTGCCTGAATACGAAGAAACTGTTGACGGT CTTCCCAAGTGCGAGAAGTGGCTTCGAGATGATGGCAAGAAACCTGCTTC AACGCAAAAATCTTGGTGGCTTGGAAGATTAGTTGGTCGTTCTGACAAGG AGACGCTTGAATGGGAGTACCCATTATCTGAGGGTCGGGAGTTCGTTCTC ACCATTCGAGCAGGTGTTGAAGGGTTTCATGTGACTATCGATGGTCGTCA
CATCAGCTCGTTTCCTTATCGTGTGGGTTACGCTGTGGAAGAAACAACGG
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 53 GGATATTAGTAGCAGGAGACGTTGATGTGATGTCTATCACAGTGACATCC CTACCCTTAACACATCCTAGCTACTACCCTGAGTTAGTTTTGGAATCGGG GGACATTTGGAAGGCACCACCTGTCCCAGCTACCAAGATAGATTTATTTA TTGGGATCATGTCCAGCAGTAACCATTTTGCAGAACGGATGGCAGTAAGG AAGACGTGGTTTCAATCTAAAGCTATTCAATCTTCGCAGGCCGTGGCTCG CTTCTTTGTAGCTCTGCATGCAAACAAGGATATCAATATGCAGTTGAAGA AGGAGGCAGACTATTATGGCGATATTATAATCCTGCCTTTCATCGACAGA TATGATATAGTGGTTCTCAAGACCGTTGAAATTTGCAAGTTTGGGGTCCA GAATGTCACAGCTAAGTATATTATGAAGTGTGACGATGACACTTTTGTGA GGATTGATAGCGTTCTCGAAGAGATTCGAACTACTTCAATATCACAAGGC CTTTACATGGGTAGCATGAATGAGTTTCACAGGCCTCTTCGTTCTGGAAA GTGGGCCGTGACTGCCGAGGAATGGCCTGAGCGAATTTACCCAATATATG CTAATGGACCAGGATATATCCTGTCAGAGGATATTGTGCATTTCATTGTG GAGATGAATGAGAGAGGCAGTTTGCAGTTATTTAAGATGGAGGACGTCAG TGTTGGAATATGGGTACGCGAATATGCGAAGCAAGTGAAGCACGTTCAAT ACGAACATAGCATACGGTTTGCTCAAGCCGGTTGTATACCGAAATACTTG ACAGCTCATTACCAATCGCCGCGTCAAATGCTGTGTCTGTGGGACAAGGT ACTTGCTCATGACGATGGGAAATGCTGCAACTTGTGA SEQ ID NO: 25 cDNA $1,3-GalT2 alternative splice variant 150 nucleotide splice insert shown in bold letters (ntl5l-300) ATGAAGAGGGGTGTGAGACCACCGGGTGTGGGATGTACAGGGCGGCAAAG AAACAATCTAATCATAGTGGCAATCATATGTTTGGTTTTTATAGCGATAT TCATCCCACCGTTTCTTGAAATGAATTCACTTCCCGATATTGATTCCCCT GTGTATAGGTTAGAAGGTATTAACTTCGCTTCACATAGACGTCGCTATCA AGAACAGGATTCACGTGTCAGTTACAGTGGCTATGGACAGCCAGATATGC CATCAACTGGTGATGAAGACATAACGAAGACACCGTCTAAAGCTTCACAG GTTTTGGAGAAGAAAGTATCAAGCTATTTGAAAAAAGTCACTCTGGAAAC TTACAGTAAAGAGGAACGCCGTAGTCCAGGGAACACAACAGGTGACATTG TTTCGCTGGAAGATGTGATAGATCGCGCCTGGTCTGCCGGCGCCAAAGCT TGGGAAGAGCTGGAAATTGCATTCAGACAGGGAGAACATTTTTCGAAGAA GGACAATAATGCCAATGCAACTGCAGATCCATGCCCAGCATCACTCTTTA CAACAGGAAAGGAATTGGACAATTTAGGAAGGGTCTTCCCACTGCCTTGT GGTCTAATGTTTGGATCAGCCATAACTCTCATTGGAAAGCCACGGGAAGC TCACATGGAGTACAAACCGCCAATCGCCAGAGTTGGGGAAGGTGTCTCTC CATACGTCATGGTGTCCCAGTTCATAATGGAGTTACAGGGCTTGAAGGTG
GTAAAAGGTGAAGATCCTCCTAGAATCCTCCACATAAACCCTCGACTCCG
WO 2008/037490 PCT/EP2007/008465 - 54 TGGTGACTGGAGCTGGAAACCCATCATTGAGCATAATACATGCTATCGAA ACCAGTGGGGCCCAGCTCATCGGTGTGAAGGTTGGCAAGTACCTGAATAC GAAGAAACCGTGGACGGTCTTCCCAAGTGCGAGAAGTGGCTTCGAGGCGA TGACAAAAAACCTGCTTCGACCCAAAAATCCTGGTGGCTTGGGCGATTAG TTGGTCATTCCGACAAGGAGACGCTTGAATGGGAGTATCCATTGTCCGAA GGTCGGGAGTTTGTTCTCACCATTCGAGCAGGTGTAGAAGGATTTCACTT AACTATTGATGGTCGGCACATCAGTTCGTTCCCTTATCGTGCGGGTTATG CTATGGAAGAAGCAACAGGAATATCAGTGGCAGGAGACGTCGATGTTCTT TCGATGACAGTAACATCATTACCTTTAACACATCCCAGCTACTACCCTGA GTTGGTTTTGGATTCGGGTGATATCTGGAAGGCACCACCTTTACCAACAG GCAAGATAGAGTTATTTGTTGGAATCATGTCAAGCAGCAATCACTTTGCA GAACGTATGGCAGTAAGAAAGACGTGGTTTCAGTCTCTGGTTATCCAATC CTCCCAAGCGGTGGCTCGCTTCTTTGTAGCTCTGCATGCAAACAAGGATA TCAATCTGCAGCTGAAGAAAGAGGCTGACTATTACGGCGATATGATAATT TTACCTTTCATCGACAGATATGATATAGTGGTTCTTAAGACCGTTGAAAT TTTCAAGTTTGGGGTCCAGAATGTTACAGTTAGCCACGTCATGAAATGTG ACGATGACACATTTGTAAGGATTGACAGCGTTCTTGAAGAGATTCGAACG ACGTCAGTAGGACAGGGCCTTTACATGGGCAGCATGAATGAGTTTCATAG ACCCCTTCGTTCTGGGAAGTGGGCCGTGACAGTTGAGGAGTGGCCTGAGC GCATTTACCCAACATACGCAAATGGTCCAGGATACATCCTTTCGGAAGAT ATTGTGCATTTTATAGTGGAGGAGAGCAAAAGAAATAATTTGAGGTTATT TAAGATGGAGGACGTCAGCGTAGGTATATGGGTACGCGAGTATGCAAAGA TGAAGTACGTGCAATACGAGCATAGCGTACGGTTTGCTCAAGCCGGTTGT ATACCTAACTACCTGACAGCGCACTATCAATCGCCGCGTCAAATGCTGTG TCTGTGGGACAAGGTGCTTGCTACCAATGACGGCAAGTGCTGCACCTTGT
GA
Claims (22)
1. An isolated DNA molecule which comprises a sequence according to SEQ ID NO: 1 with an open reading frame from base pair 513 to base pair 2417 or a sequence according to SEQ ID NO: 24 with an open reading frame from base pair 321 to base pair 2387, or has at least 80% identity with at least one of the above whole sequences, or comprises a sequence which is degenerated to the above sequences due to the genetic code, with the sequences coding for plant proteins having p1,3-galactosyltransferase activity (Pl,3 GalT activity) or being complementary thereto,
2. The DNA molecule according to claim 1, wherein said DNA molecule codes for a protein having GlcNAc-@l,3 galactosyltransferase activity, a protein having activity in respect to the transfer of galactose from UDP-galactose to non reducing GlcNAc residues, and/or a protein having activity in respect to the transfer of galactose from UDP-galactose to non reducing GlcNAc residues of N-glycan structures linked to proteins.
3. The DNA molecule according to claim 1 or 2, wherein said DNA molecule has at least 90% identity with one of the sequences according to SEQ ID NO: 1 or SEQ ID NO: 24 or is degenerated due to the genetic code or is complementary thereto.
4. The DNA molecule according to any one of claims 1 to 3, wherein said DNA molecule is covalently associated with a detectable marker substance.
S. A vector transcribing an antisense RNA which is complementary to the mRNA of the pl,3-galactosyltransferase encoded by the DNA molecule according to any one of claims 1 to 3, wherein the antisense RNA comprises 50 to 200 nucleotides. - 56
6. An expression vector which comprises a DNA molecule according to any one of claims 1 to 4 or a DNA molecule according to any one of claims 1 to 4 wherein said DNA molecule is inversely oriented with respect to the promoter.
7. A DNA molecule coding for a ribozyme wherein said DNA molecule has two sequence sections, each of which has a length of at least 10 to 15 base pairs and which are complementary to the sequence sections of a DNA molecule according to any one of claims 1 to 4 so that said ribozyme complexes and cuts the mRNA transcribed by a natural 1,3 -GalT molecule.
8. A biologically functional vector comprising a DNA molecule according to claim 7.
9. A method of cloning pl,3-galactosyltransferase wherein said method comprises cloning the DNA molecule according to any one of claims 1 to 3 or the DNA molecule according to any one of claims 1 to 3 but lacking at least the transmembrane encoding sequence, into a vector subsequently transfected into a host cell, a host tissue or a host with cell lines being obtained by means of selection and amplification of transfected host cells, wherein said cell lines express the active p1,3galactosyltransferase.
10. An isolated protein having p,3-galactosyltransferase activity and at least 80t sequence identity to the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NOs: 19 or 26.
11. A DNA vector comprising a molecule with a nucleic acid sequence according to SEQ ID NO. 3.
12. A method of preparing recombinant host cells or plants, wherein the production of pl,3-galactosyltransferase is suppressed, or completely stopped, respectively, wherein: * at least one of the vectors according to any one of claims 6, 8 or 11, or a vector comprising a DNA molecule according to - 57 any one of claims 1 to 3, respectively, whereby said DNA molecule comprises a deletion, insertion and/or substitution mutation, is inserted into said host cell, or plant, respectively; or e the DNA molecule according to any one of claims 1 to 4, whereby said DNA molecule comprises a deletion, insertion and/or substitution mutation, is inserted into the genome of said host cell, or plant, respectively, at the position of the non-mutated, homologous sequence.
13. Recombinant plants or plant cells wherein their endogenous pl,3-galactosyltransferase production is suppressed or completely stopped, * comprising at least one of the vectors according to any one of claims 6, 8 or 11, or a vector comprising a DNA molecule according to any one of claims 1 to 4, respectively, whereby said DNA molecule comprises a deletion, insertion and/or substitution mutation; or e comprising the DNA molecule according to any one of claims 1 to 4, wherein said DNA molecule comprises a deletion, insertion and/or substitution mutation, in the genome of the cells or plants, respectively, at the site of the non mutated, homologous sequence.
14. An isolated peptide nucleic acid (PNA) molecule which comprises a base sequence complementary to the sequence of a DNA molecule according to any one of claims 1 to 3 which codes for P31,3-galactosyltransferase, or comprises a base sequence corresponding to the sequence of a DNA molecule according to any one of claims 1 to 3 which codes for p1,3-galactosyltransferase.
15. A method of producing plants, or cells, respectively, having blocked expression of Pl,3-galactosyltransferase at the transcription or translation level, respectively, comprising inserting PNA molecules according to claim 14 into the plant or cells. - 58
16. The method of claim 12 or claim 15, wherein said cells are plant cells.
17. A method of producing recombinant glycoproteins, comprising transfecting the recombinant plants, plant cells or plant tissues, respectively, according to claim 13, or plants, plant tissues or cells, respectively, in which the PNA molecule according to claim 14 is inserted and which have a blocked expression of the pl,3 galactosyltransferase at the transcription or translation level, respectively, with the gene that codes for the glycoprotein, so that the recombinant glycoproteins are expressed.
18. The method of claim 16, wherein the recombinant glycoproteins are human glycoproteins.
19. The method of claim 18 wherein the human glycoproteins are for medical use.
20. A method of producing glycoproteins with N-glycans, comprising the in vitro or in vivo elongation of the N-glycan of a glycoprotein with an active pl,3-galactosyltransferase protein according to claim 10.
21. Use of a vector according to claim 5 to inhibit the expression of the $l1,3-galactosyltransferase encoded by the DNA molecules according to anyone of claims 1 to 3.
22. A DNA molecule according to any one of claims 1 to 4 or 7, or a vector according to any one of claims 5, 6, 8 or 11, or a method according to any one of claims 9, 12 or 15 to 20, or a protein according to claim 10, or recombinant plants or plant cells according to claim 13, or a peptide nucleic acid according to claim 14, or use according to claim 21, substantially as hereinbefore defined with reference to the Figures and/or Examples.
Applications Claiming Priority (3)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| EP06450139A EP1905825A1 (en) | 2006-09-29 | 2006-09-29 | Galactosyltransferase |
| EP06450139.8 | 2006-09-29 | ||
| PCT/EP2007/008465 WO2008037490A2 (en) | 2006-09-29 | 2007-09-28 | Galactosyltransferase |
Publications (2)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| AU2007302184A1 AU2007302184A1 (en) | 2008-04-03 |
| AU2007302184B2 true AU2007302184B2 (en) | 2013-10-10 |
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| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| AU2007302184A Expired - Fee Related AU2007302184B2 (en) | 2006-09-29 | 2007-09-28 | Galactosyltransferase |
Country Status (14)
| Country | Link |
|---|---|
| US (1) | US20100050292A1 (en) |
| EP (2) | EP1905825A1 (en) |
| JP (1) | JP2010504741A (en) |
| KR (1) | KR20090077059A (en) |
| CN (1) | CN101522891A (en) |
| AT (1) | ATE513906T1 (en) |
| AU (1) | AU2007302184B2 (en) |
| CA (1) | CA2664767A1 (en) |
| DK (1) | DK2066790T3 (en) |
| ES (1) | ES2366975T3 (en) |
| PL (1) | PL2066790T3 (en) |
| PT (1) | PT2066790E (en) |
| SI (1) | SI2066790T1 (en) |
| WO (1) | WO2008037490A2 (en) |
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| CN102703399B (en) * | 2012-06-13 | 2014-06-11 | 北京京蒙高科干细胞技术有限公司 | Alpha-1, 3 galactosyl transferase fusion protein and preparation method thereof |
| CN106119185A (en) * | 2016-08-30 | 2016-11-16 | 中国科学院昆明植物研究所 | A kind of preparation method of small liwan moss protoplast |
| US11591376B2 (en) * | 2017-10-11 | 2023-02-28 | Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation (Warf) | Over-expression of AZF1 improves the rate of anaerobic xylose fermentation in engineered yeast strains |
| KR102302690B1 (en) | 2021-03-17 | 2021-09-15 | 주식회사 민영승강기 | Car box and rope connection device of cargo elevator |
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| US20040034888A1 (en) * | 1999-05-06 | 2004-02-19 | Jingdong Liu | Nucleic acid molecules and other molecules associated with plants and uses thereof for plant improvement |
| WO2004035798A2 (en) * | 2002-10-18 | 2004-04-29 | Cropdesign N.V. | Identification of e2f target genes and uses thereof |
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| DE69841894D1 (en) * | 1997-11-21 | 2010-10-21 | Merck Serono Biodevelopment Sa | Outer membrane polypeptide of Chlamydia pneumoniae and fragments thereof and their use, in particular for the diagnosis, prevention and treatment of an infection |
| US20040031072A1 (en) * | 1999-05-06 | 2004-02-12 | La Rosa Thomas J. | Soy nucleic acid molecules and other molecules associated with transcription plants and uses thereof for plant improvement |
| DE19947290A1 (en) | 1999-10-01 | 2001-04-19 | Greenovation Pflanzenbiotechno | Process for the production of proteinaceous substances |
| JP2002199885A (en) * | 2001-01-05 | 2002-07-16 | Kyowa Hakko Kogyo Co Ltd | β1,3-galactosyltransferase and DNA encoding the enzyme |
| WO2002088364A1 (en) * | 2001-04-23 | 2002-11-07 | Kyowa Hakko Kogyo Co., Ltd. | ss1,3-GALACTOSE TRANSFERASE AND DNA ENCODING THE ENZYME |
| ATE335084T1 (en) * | 2002-12-20 | 2006-08-15 | Greenovation Biotech Gmbh | METHOD FOR PRODUCING GLYCOSYLATED PROTEINS IN BRYOPHYTE CELLS |
| WO2005017176A2 (en) * | 2003-07-23 | 2005-02-24 | Sequenom, Inc. | Methods for identifying risk of melanoma and treatments thereof |
| JP2009526520A (en) * | 2006-01-17 | 2009-07-23 | バイオレックス セラピュティックス インク | Compositions and methods for humanization and optimization of N-glycans in plants |
-
2006
- 2006-09-29 EP EP06450139A patent/EP1905825A1/en not_active Withdrawn
-
2007
- 2007-09-28 CN CNA2007800361864A patent/CN101522891A/en active Pending
- 2007-09-28 CA CA002664767A patent/CA2664767A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 2007-09-28 ES ES07818545T patent/ES2366975T3/en active Active
- 2007-09-28 JP JP2009529616A patent/JP2010504741A/en active Pending
- 2007-09-28 PT PT07818545T patent/PT2066790E/en unknown
- 2007-09-28 WO PCT/EP2007/008465 patent/WO2008037490A2/en not_active Ceased
- 2007-09-28 AU AU2007302184A patent/AU2007302184B2/en not_active Expired - Fee Related
- 2007-09-28 PL PL07818545T patent/PL2066790T3/en unknown
- 2007-09-28 SI SI200730716T patent/SI2066790T1/en unknown
- 2007-09-28 DK DK07818545.1T patent/DK2066790T3/en active
- 2007-09-28 EP EP07818545A patent/EP2066790B1/en not_active Not-in-force
- 2007-09-28 US US12/443,377 patent/US20100050292A1/en not_active Abandoned
- 2007-09-28 AT AT07818545T patent/ATE513906T1/en active
- 2007-09-28 KR KR1020097008893A patent/KR20090077059A/en not_active Ceased
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| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| US20040034888A1 (en) * | 1999-05-06 | 2004-02-19 | Jingdong Liu | Nucleic acid molecules and other molecules associated with plants and uses thereof for plant improvement |
| WO2004035798A2 (en) * | 2002-10-18 | 2004-04-29 | Cropdesign N.V. | Identification of e2f target genes and uses thereof |
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| DUNAEVA, M. et al., European Journal of Biochemistry, 2001, Vol. 268, No. 21, pages 5521-5529 * |
| EMBL Accession No. AY090451, 25 March 2002 * |
| EMBL Accession No. CL963081, 22 September 2004 * |
Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| EP1905825A1 (en) | 2008-04-02 |
| AU2007302184A1 (en) | 2008-04-03 |
| EP2066790A2 (en) | 2009-06-10 |
| SI2066790T1 (en) | 2011-10-28 |
| WO2008037490A3 (en) | 2008-05-15 |
| CN101522891A (en) | 2009-09-02 |
| JP2010504741A (en) | 2010-02-18 |
| DK2066790T3 (en) | 2011-10-10 |
| CA2664767A1 (en) | 2008-04-03 |
| WO2008037490A2 (en) | 2008-04-03 |
| EP2066790B1 (en) | 2011-06-22 |
| KR20090077059A (en) | 2009-07-14 |
| PL2066790T3 (en) | 2011-11-30 |
| ES2366975T3 (en) | 2011-10-27 |
| PT2066790E (en) | 2011-09-05 |
| US20100050292A1 (en) | 2010-02-25 |
| ATE513906T1 (en) | 2011-07-15 |
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